Interfacing reconfigurable logic with a CPU
Walker, K.; Budiu, M.; Goldstein, S.C.
Field-Programmable Custom Computing Machines, 2000 IEEE Symposium on
Volume , Issue , 2000 Page(s):317 - 318
Digital Object Identifier 10.1109/FPGA.2000.903434
Summary:Reconfigurable computing devices have achieved substantial
performance improvements over conventional processors on some
computational kernels. These benefits derive from hardware customization
which avoids the mismatch between the basic requirements of the
algorithms and the architectures of the processors. A reconfigurable
fabric alone is not sufficient for general-purpose computing since it
can be ill-suited to executing entire programs due to space limitations,
dataflow-centricity, and inefficiency at implementing some operations
(e.g. floating-point arithmetic). These observations have led to the
appearance of numerous designs which place some form of reconfigurable
logic under the control of a general-purpose processor. The authors
explore the ways in which a reconfigurable fabric can be interfaced with
a general-purpose processor. While off-chip reconfigurable fabrics have
proven to be quite effective at performing streaming, data-intensive
computations, they require large streams of data to overcome the latency
between the devices. We explore the design space for an on-chip fabric,
i.e., a reconfigurable function unit (RFU). An RFU allows smaller
portions of application to be mapped to the fabric in the form of custom
instructions. Though the speedups achieved for stream based computations
will in general be much larger than those for custom instructions, they
are limited to a smaller class of applications. Custom instructions,
however, can be found in a larger class of programs, and compiler
techniques can automatically create them
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