Run-time adaptive on-chip communication scheme

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Abstract

During run-time varying workloads and/or constraints in embedded systems require run-time adaptivity to provide a high degree of efficiency during any operation mode/scenario. Design time decisions can often only cover certain scenarios and fail in efficiency when hard-to-predict system scenarios occur. We are presenting the first approach of an adaptive on-chip communication scheme. It provides an adaptive routing/path allocation algorithm to meet a required level of QoS (guaranteed bandwidth). In our architecture adaptive runtime links are established by re-assigning buffer blocks ondemand. This adaptive buffer allocation scheme increases the buffer utilization and decreases the overall buffer use on an average of 42% in our case study analysis compared to a fixed buffer assignment strategy. The area overhead introduced by the adaptive scheme can be traded-off against the flexibility in order to select an available path and on-demand buffer allocation. We demonstrate the advantage by using various real world digital media applications and compare our approach to the state-ofthe-art static on-chip communication schemes. © 2007 IEEE.

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APA

Al Faruque, M. A., Ebi, T., & Henkel, J. (2007). Run-time adaptive on-chip communication scheme. In IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design, Digest of Technical Papers, ICCAD (pp. 26–31). https://doi.org/10.1109/ICCAD.2007.4397239

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