G-MAC: an application-specific MAC/co-processor synthesizer

A modern special-purpose processor (e.g., for image and graphical applications) usually contains a set of instructions supporting complex multiply-operations. These instructions perform a variety of multiply-operations with various data bit-widths and concurrent-execution requirements. For instance,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in2003 Design, Automation and Test in Europe Conference and Exhibition pp. 1134 - 1135
Main Authors Chang, A.C.-Y., Wu-An Kuo, Wu, A.C.-H., Ting Ting Hwang
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 2003
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ISBN0769518702
9780769518701
ISSN1530-1591
DOI10.1109/DATE.2003.1253769

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Summary:A modern special-purpose processor (e.g., for image and graphical applications) usually contains a set of instructions supporting complex multiply-operations. These instructions perform a variety of multiply-operations with various data bit-widths and concurrent-execution requirements. For instance, such an instruction set may include instructions to perform signed/unsigned 32/spl times/32, signed/unsigned dual 16/spl times/16, signed/unsigned 8/spl times/8 MAC, and etc. Typically, a co-processor or a complex MAC (Multiplier-ACcumulator) unit is required to execute those instructions. Developing such a complex MAC/co-processor involves a series of design tasks including micro-architecture design, component allocation/binding, interconnect binding, pipeline insertion and control generation. This design process is non-trivial, time-consuming and error-prone, which is usually performed by experienced design engineers. In this paper, we present a synthesis method for application-specific MAC/coprocessor generation. The MAC/co-processor synthesis problem is defined as: Given a set of instructions and the number of execution cycles for each instruction, generate a MAC/co-processor design (including a data-path and a control unit) such that the total area-cost is minimized subject to the given execution-cycle constraints. The MAC/co-processor generation consists of the following two steps. In the first step, we determine a set of minimum-cost components required to realize the given instruction set. In the second step, we perform micro-architectural-level synthesis tasks, including component mapping, interconnect synthesis, pipeline insertion, and control synthesis to generate the MAC/co- processor design.
ISBN:0769518702
9780769518701
ISSN:1530-1591
DOI:10.1109/DATE.2003.1253769