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Today's microprocessors sport a general-purpose design which has its own advantages and disadvantages. Adv: One chip can run a range of programs. That's why you
don't need separate computers for different jobs, such as crunching spreadsheets or editing digital photos down. Suppose, instead, that the chip's circuits could be tailored specifically for the problem at hand--say, computer-aided design--and then rewired, on the fly, when you loaded a tax-preparation program. One set of chips, little bigger than a credit card, could do almost anything, even changing into a wireless phone. The market for such versatile marvels would be huge, and would translate into lower costs for users. So computer scientists are hatching a novel concept that could increase number-crunching power--and trim costs as well. Call it the chameleon chip. A reconfigurable processor is a microprocessor with erasable hardware that can rewire itself dynamically. This allows the chip to adapt effectively to the programming tasks demanded by the particular software they are interfacing with at any given time. Ideally, the reconfigurable processor can transform itself from a video chip to a central processing unit (cpu) to a graphics chip, for example, all optimized to allow applications to Disadv: For any one application, much of the chip's circuitry isn't needed, and the presence of those "wasted" circuits slows things
run at the highest possible speed. The new chips can be called a "chip
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on demand." In practical terms, this ability can translate to immense flexibility in terms of device functions. For example, a single device could serve as both a camera and a tape recorder (among numerous other possibilities): you would simply download the desired software and the processor would reconfigure itself to optimize performance for that function. Reconfigurable processors, competing in the market with traditional hard-wired chips and several types of programmable microprocessors. Programmable chips have been in existence for over ten years. Digital signal processors (DSPs), for example, are highperformance programmable chips used in cell phones, automobiles, and various types of music players. Another version, programmable logic chips are equipped with arrays of memory cells that can be programmed to perform hardware functions using software tools. These are more flexible than the specialized DSP chips but also slower and more expensive. Hard-wired chips are the oldest, cheapest, and fastest - but also the least flexible - of all the options.
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handhelds. Processors operate at 24,000 16-bit million operations per second (MOPS), 3,000 16-bit million multiply-accumulates per second (MMACS), and provide 50 channels of CDMA2000 chip-rate processing. The 0.25-micron chip, the CS2112 is an example. These new chips are able to rewire themselves on the fly to create the exact hardware needed to run a piece of software at the utmost speed. an example of such kind of a chip is a chameleon chip. this can also be called a chip on demand Reconfigurable computing goes a step beyond programmable chips in the matter of flexibility. Reconfigurable chips are simply the extreme end of programmability.
The overall performance of the ACM can surpass the DSP because the ACM only constructs the actual hardware needed to execute the software, whereas DSPs and microprocessors force the software to fit its given architecture. One reason that this type of versatility is not possible today is that handheld gadgets tipically do one thing really well. These chips
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are fast and relatively cheap, but their circuits are literally written in stone -- or at least in silicon. A multipurpose gadget would have to have many specialized chips -- a costly and clumsy solution. Alternately, you could use a general-purpose microprocessor, like the one in your PC, but that would be slow as well as expensive. For these reasons, chip designers are turning increasingly to reconfigurable hardwareintegrated circuits where the architecture of the internal logic elements can be arranged and rearranged on the fly to fit particular applications. Designers of multimedia systems face three significant challenges in today's ultra-competitive marketplace: Our products must do more, cost less, and be brought to the market quicker than ever. Though each of these goals is individually attainable, the hat trick is generally unachievable with traditional design and implementation techniques. Fortunately, some new techniques are emerging from the study of reconfigurable computing that make it possible to design systems that satisfy all three requirements simultaneously. Although originally proposed in the late 1960s by a researcher at UCLA, reconfigurable computing is a relatively new field of study. The decades-long delay had mostly to do with a lack of acceptable reconfigurable hardware. Reprogrammable logic chips like field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) have been around for many years, but these chips have only recently reached gate densities making them suitable for high-end applications. With an anticipated doubling of gate densities every 18 months, the situation will only become more favorable from this point forward.
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The primary product is a groundstation equipment for satellite communications. This application involves high-rate communications, signal processing, and a variety of network protocols and data formats.
2.2 FPGA
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One of the most promising approaches in the realm of reconfigurable architecture is a technology called "field-programmable gate arrays." A designer can download a new wiring pattern and store it in the chip's memory, where it can be easily accessed when needed. Not so hard after all Reconfigurable hardware first became practical with the introduction a few years ago of a device called a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) by Xilinx, an electronics company that is now based in San Jose, California. An FPGA is a chip consisting of a large number of logic cells. These cells, in turn, are sets of transistors wired together to perform simple logical operations. 2.2.1 Evolving FPGAs FPGAs are arrays of logic blocks that are strung together through software commands to implement higher-order logic functions. Logic blocks are similar to switches with multiple inputs and a single output, and are used in digital circuits to perform binary operations. FPGA blocks can perform the same high-speed hardware functions as fixed-function ASICs, andto distinguish them from ASICsthey can be rewired and reprogrammed at any time from a remote location through software. Although it took several seconds or more to change connections in the earliest FPGAs, FPGAs today can be configured in milliseconds. The growth in FPGA technology has lifted the arrays beyond the simple role of providing glue logic. With their current capabilities, they clearly now can be classed as system-level components just like cpus and DSPs. The largest of the FPGA devices made by the company
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with which one of the authors of this article is affiliated, for example, has more than 150 billion transistors, seven times more than a Pentiumclass microprocessor. Given today's time-to-market pressures, it is increasingly critical that all system-level components be easy to integrate, especially since the phase involving the integration of multiple technologies has become the most time-consuming part of a product's development cycle. To Integrating Hardware and Software systems designers producing mixed cpu and FPGA designs can take advantage of deterministic real-time operating systems (RTOSs). Deterministic software is suited for controlling hardware. As such, it can be used to efficiently manage the content of system data and the flow of such data from a cpu to an FPGA. FPGA developers can work with RTOS suppliers to facilitate the design and deployment of systems using combinations of the two technologies. Integration of FPGA technology into systems using a deterministic RTOS can be streamlined by means of an enhanced application programming interface (API). Development, profiling, and analysis tools are available that can be used to analyze computational hot spots in code and to perform low-level timing analysis in multitasking environments. An FPGA consists of an array of configurable logic blocks that implement the logical functions. In FPGA's, the logic functions performed within the logic blocks, and sending signals to the chip can alter the connections between the blocks. The configurable logic blocks
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in new FPGA's can be rewired and reprogrammed repeatedly in around a microsecond. One advantages of FPGA is that it needs small time to market Flexibility and Upgrade advantages Cheap to make .We can configure an FPGA using Very High Density Language [VHDL] Handel C Java .FPGAs are used presently in Encryption Image Processing Mobile Communications .FPGAs can be used in 4G mobile communication The advantages of FPGAs are that Field programmable gate arrays offer companies the possibility of develloping a chip very quickly, since a chip can be configured by software. A chip can also be reconfigured, either during execution time, or as part of an upgrade to allow new applications, simply by loading new configuration into the chip. The advantages can be seen in terms of cost, speed and power consumption. The added functionality of multi-parallelism allows one FPGA to replace multiple ASICs. 2.2.1 APPLICATIONS The applications of FPGAs are in image processing encryption mobile communication memory management and digital signal processing telephone units mobile base stations. As it is getting more expensive and difficult to pattern, or etch, the elaborate circuitry used in microprocessors; many experts
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have predicted that maintaining the current rate of putting more circuits into ever smaller spaces will, sometime in the next 10 to 15 years, result in features on microchips no bigger than a few atoms, which would demand a nearly impossible level of precision in fabricating circuitry But reconfigurable chips don't need that type of precision and we can make computers that function at the nanoscale level.
2.3 CS2112
(a reconfigurable processor developed by chameleon systems) RCP architecture is designed to be as flexible as an FPGA, and as easy to program as a digital signal processor (DSP), with realtime, visual debugging capability. development kit, enables The development environment, to develop and debug comprising Chameleon's C-SIDE software tool suite and CT2112SDM customers communication and signal processing systems running on the RCP. The RCP's development environment helps overcome a fundamental design and debug challenge facing communication system designers.In order to build sufficient performance, channel capacity, and flexibility into their systems, today's designers have been forced to employ an amalgamation of DSPs, FPGAs and ASICs, each of which requires a unique design and debug environment. The RCP platform was designed from the ground up to alleviate this problem: first by significantly exceeding the performance and channel capacity of the fastest DSPs; second by integrating a
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complete SoC subsystem, including an embedded microprocessor, PCI core, DMA function, and high-speed bus; and third by consolidating the design and debug environment into a single platform-based design system that affords the designer comprehensive visibility and control. The C-SIDE software suite includes tools used to compile C and assembly code for execution on the CS2112's embedded microprocessor, and Verilog simulation and synthesis tools used to create parallel datapath kernels which run on the CS2112's reconfigurable processing fabric.
In addition to code generation tools, the package contains source-level debugging tools that support simulation and real-time debugging. Chameleon's design approach leverages the methods employed by most of today's communications system designers. The designer starts with a C program that models signal processing functions of the baseband system. Having identified the dataflow intensive functional blocks, the designer implements them in the RCP to accelerate them by 10- to 100-fold. The designer creates equivalent functions for those blocks, called kernels, in Chameleon's reconfigurable assembly language-like design entry language. The assembler then automatically generates standard Verilog for these kernels that the designer can verify with commercial Verilog simulators. Using these tools, the designer can compare testbench results for the original C functions with similar results for the Verilog kernels. In the next phase, the designer
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synthesises the Verilog kernels using Chameleon's synthesis tools targeting Chameleon technology. At the end, the tools output a bit file that is used to configure the RCP.The designer then integrates the application level C code with Verilog kernels and the rest of the standard C function.Chameleon's C-SIDE compiler and linker technology makes this integration step transparent to the designer. The CS2112 development environment makes all chip registers and memory locations accessible through a development console that enables full processor-like debugging, including features like single-stepping and setting breakpoints. Chameleon's development board enables the designer to connect multiple RCPs to other devices in the system using the PCI bus and/or programmable I/O pins. This helps prove the design concept, and enables the designer to profile the performance of the whole basestation system in a realworld environment. With telecommunications OEMs facing shrinking product life cycles and increasing market pressures, not to mention the constant flux of protocols and standards, it's more necessary than ever to have a platform that's reconfigurable. This is where the chameleon chips are going to make its effect felt.
3.CHALLENGES
3.1 CHALLENGES FACED
Designers of multimedia systems face three significant challenges in today's ultra-competitive marketplace: Our products must do more, CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 11
3.1.2DEVELOPING TECHNIQUES
But now, labs in Europe, Japan, and the U.S. are developing techniques to rewire FPGA-like chips anytime--and even software that can map out circuitry that's optimized for specific problems.
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As it is getting more expensive and difficult to pattern, or etch, the elaborate circuitry used in microprocessors; many experts have predicted that maintaining the current rate of putting more circuits into ever smaller spaces will, sometime in the next 10 to 15 years, result in features on microchips no bigger than a few atoms, which would demand a nearly impossible level of precision in fabricating circuitry But reconfigurable chips don't need that type of precision and we can make computers that function at the nano scale level.
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3.3.3 Explanation:
Reconfigurable computing goes a step beyond programmable chips in the matter of flexibility. It is not only possible but relatively commonplace to "rewrite" the silicon so that it can perform new functions in a split second. When we talk about reconfigurable computing were usually talking about FPGA-based system designs. Unfortunately, that doesnt qualify the term precisely enough. System designers use FPGAs in many different ways. The most common use of an FPGA is for prototyping the design of an ASIC. CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 14
In this scenario, the FPGA is present only on the prototype hardware and is replaced by the corresponding ASIC in the final production system. This use of FPGAs has nothing to do with reconfigurable computing. However, many system designers are choosing to leave the FPGAs as part of the production hardware. The logic within the FPGA can be changed if or when it is necessary, which has many advantages. For example, hardware bug fixes and upgrades can be administered as easily as their software counterpartsOnce theyve downloaded the new logic design to the system and restarted it, theyll be able to use the new version of the protocol. This is configurable computing; reconfigurable computing goes one step further. Reconfigurable computing involves manipulation of the logic within the FPGA at run-time. In other words, the design of the hardware may change in response to the demands placed upon the system while it is running. Here, the FPGA acts as an execution engine for a variety of different hardware functions some executing in parallel, others in serial much as a CPU acts as an execution engine for a variety of software threads. We might even go so far as to call the FPGA a reconfigurable processing unit (RPU). Reconfigurable computing allows system designers to execute more hardware than they have gates to fit, which works especially well when there are parts of the hardware that are occasionally idle. One theoretical application is a smart cellular phone that supports multiple communication and data protocols, though just one a time. When the phone passes from a geographic region that is served by one protocol into a region that is served by another, the hardware is automatically reconfigured. This is reconfigurable computing at its best, and using this approach it is possible to design systems that do more, cost less, and have shorter design and implementation cycles.
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3.3.4 Advantages:
Reconfigurable computing has several advantages. First, it is possible to achieve greater functionality with a simpler hardware design. Because not all of the logic must be present in the FPGA at all times, the cost of supporting additional features is reduced to the cost of the memory required to store the logic design. Consider again the multiprotocol cellular phone. It would be possible to support as many protocols as could be fit into the available on-board ROM. It is even conceivable that new protocols could be uploaded from a base station to the handheld phone on an as-needed basis, thus requiring no additional memory. The second advantage is lower system cost, which does not manifest itself exactly as you might expect. On a low-volume product, there will be some production cost savings, which result from the elimination of the expense of ASIC design and fabrication. However, for higher-volume products, the production cost of fixed hardware may actually be lower. We have to think in terms of lifetime system costs to see the savings. Systems based on reconfigurable computing are upgradable in the field. Such changes extend the useful life of the system, thus reducing lifetime costs. The final advantage of reconfigurable computing is reduced time-tomarket. The fact that youre no longer using an ASIC is a big help in this respect. There are no chip design and prototyping cycles, which eliminates a large amount of development effort. In addition, the logic design remains flexible right up until (and even after) the product ships. This allows an incremental design flow, a luxury not typically available to hardware designers. You can even ship a product that meets the minimum requirements and add features after deployment. In the case of CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 16
a networked product like a set-top box or cellular telephone, it may even be possible to make such enhancements without customer involvement.
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Reconfigurable devices have proven extremely efficient for certain types of processing tasks. The key to their cost/performance advantage is that conventional processors are often limited by instruction bandwidth and execution restrictions or by an insufficient number or type of functional units. Reconfigurable logic exploits more program parallelism. By dedicating significantly less instruction memory per active computing element, reconfigurable devices achieve a 10x improvement in functional density over microprocessors. At the same time this lower memory ratio allows reconfigurable devices to deploy active capacity at a finer grained level, allowing them to realize a higher yield of their raw capacity, sometimes as much as 10x, than conventional processors. The high functional density characteristic of reconfigurable devices comes at the expense of the high functional diversity characteristic of microprocessors. Microprocessors have evolved to a highly optimized configuration with clear cost/performance advantages over reconfigurable arrays for a large set of tasks with high functional diversity. By combining a reconfigurable array with a processing core we hope to achieve the best of both worlds. While it is possible to combine a conventional processor with commercial reconfigurable devices at the circuit board level, integration radically changes the i/o costs and design point for both devices, resulting in a qualitatively different system. Notably, the lower on-chip communication costs allow efficient cooperation between the processor and array at a finer grain than is sensible with discrete designs.
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Process:
To do this, the run-time environment must first locate space within the RPU that is large enough to execute the given hardware object. It must then perform the necessary routing between the hardware objects inputs and outputs and the blocks of memory reserved for each data stream. Next, it must stop the appropriate clock, reprogram the internal logic, and restart the
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RPU. Once the object starts to execute, the run-time environment must continuously monitor the hardware objects status flags to determine when it is done executing. Once it is done, the caller can be notified and given the results. The run-time environment is then free to reclaim the reconfigurable logic gates that were taken up by that hardware object and to wait for additional requests to arrive from the application software.
Benefits:
The principal benefits of reconfigurable computing are the ability to execute larger hardware designs with fewer gates and to realize the flexibility of a software-based solution while retaining the execution speed of a more traditional, hardware-based approach. This makes doing more with less a reality. In our own business we have seen tremendous cost savings, simply because our systems do not become obsolete as quickly as our competitors because reconfigurable computing enables the addition of new features in the field, allows rapid implementation of new standards and protocols on an as-needed basis, and protects their investment in computing hardware. Whether you do it for your customers or for yourselves, you should at least consider using reconfigurable computing in your next design. You may find, as we have, that the benefits far exceed the initial learning curve. And as reconfigurable computing becomes more popular, these benefits will only increase.
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or more processing elementsthat is, general-purpose embedded processors and/or digital signal processor (DSP) coresalong with memory, input/output devices, and other hardware into a single chip. These versatile chips can perform many different functions. However, while SoCs offer choices, the user can choose only among functions that already reside inside the device. Developers also create ASICschips that handle a limited set of tasks but do them very quickly. The limitation of most types of complex hardware devicesSoCs, ASICs, and general-purpose cpusis that the logical hardware functions cannot be modified once the silicon design is complete and fabricated. Consequently, developers are typically forced to amortize the cost of SoCs and ASICs over a product lifetime that may be extremely short in today's volatile technology environment. Solutions involving combinations of cpus and FPGAs allow hardware functionality to be reprogrammed, even in deployed systems, and enable medical instrument OEMs to develop new platforms for applications that require rapid adaptation to input. The technologies combined provide the best of both worlds for system-level design. Careful analysis of computational requirements reveals that many algorithms are well suited to high-speed sequential processing, many can benefit from parallel processing capabilities, and many can be broken down into components that are split between the two. With this in mind, it makes sense to always use the best technology for the job at hand.
Fig 3.1:multifunction implementation In a conventional ASIC or FPGA, multiple algorithms are implemented as separate hardware modules. Four algorithms would divide the chip into four functionalareas. With Reconfigurable Technology, the four algorithms are loaded into the entire reconfigurable Fabric one at a time. First, the entire Fabric is dedicated to algorithm 1; during this processing time, algorithm 2 is loaded into the background place. In a single clock cycle, the entire Fabric is swapped to algorithm 2; during this processing time, algorithm 3 is loaded into the background plane. The entire reconfigurable fabric is dedicated to just one algorithm So finally the result is: much higher performance, lower cost and lower power consumption
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4. RCP ARCHITECTURE
Machine design supposes that some pins are considered as the configuration inputs and another as data or control inputs and outputs. A new chip must inside determine the set of the function blocks (FB), which are used to construct the circuit, rules of their interconnections and ways of the input/output connections. The most important parts are the logic circuits, which configure function blocks according to data in the configuration memory. The various possible connections between functional blocks are encoded to bits known as Configuration bits. Resulting configuration stream is downloaded into configuration memory through configuration inputs. Thus, a new Reconfigurable machine is established. DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT
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The development environment, comprising Chameleon's C-SIDE software tool suite and CT2112SDM development kit, enables customers to develop and debug communication and signal processing systems running on the RCP. The RCP's development environment helps overcome a fundamental design and debug challenge facing communication system designers. PRESENT DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT In order to build sufficient performance, channel capacity, and flexibility into their systems, today's designers have been forced to employ an amalgamation of DSPs, FPGAs and ASICs, each of which requires a unique design and debug environment.
PROBLEMS OVERCOME BY RCP PLATFORM The RCP platform was designed from the ground up to alleviate this problem: first by significantly exceeding the performance and channel second by integrating a complete SoC subsystem, including an third by consolidating the design and debug environment into a
capacity of the fastest DSPs; embedded microprocessor, PCI core, DMA function, and high-speed bus; and single platform-based design system that affords the designer comprehensive visibility and control.
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32 bit PCI controller reconfigurable processing fabric (RPF) high speed system bus programmable I/O (160 pins) DMA Subsystem Configuration Subsystem
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The above mentioned fabric comprises an array of reconfigurable tiles used to implement the desired algorithms. Each tile contains seven 32-bit reconfigurable datapath units, four blocks of local store memory, two 16x24bit multipliers, and a control logic unit. The Fabric provides unmatched algorithmic computation power to Chameleon Chip. It consists of 84,32-bit Data path Units and 24, 1624-bit Multipliers, Operating at 125Mhz, they provide up to 3,000 16-bit Million MultiplyAccumulates Per Second and 24,000 16-bit Million Operations Per Second. The fabric is divided into Slices, the basic unit of reconfiguration. The CS2112 has 4 Slices with 3 Tiles in each. Each tile can be CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 26
reconfigure
da
Datapath Control
Memories 16x24bit
The high-performance 32bit Data path Unit (DPU): The Tile includes seven Data path Units. The DPU is a data processing module that directly supports all C and Verilog operations. The Dynamic Interconnect connects the modules within the fabric.
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The Tile includes seven Data path Units. The DPU is a data processing module that directly supports all C and Verilog (Verilog is a hardware description language used to design and document electronic systems) operations. The routing multiplexers select operands. There are 3 routing classes: a) Local routes-connects near by 7 DPUs with a delay of 1 clock cycle. b) Intra-slice routes-connects DPUs within a slice with a delay of 1 clock cycle. c) Inter-slice routes-connects DPUs in different slices with a delay of 2 clock cycles.
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-bit real -time Barrel Shifter for shifting operations. The DPU also
-bit AND/OR Mask operators. -bit Operator, which directly implements all C and Verilog signed/unsigned shifting and bit -field
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1624 Single-Cycle Multiplier The Tile includes two 1624-bit single-cycle multipliers. With a total of 24 multipliers, the CS2112 delivers 3,000 Million Multiply-Accumulates per Second. Local Store Memory (LSM)
The Tile includes four 32-bit wide by 128 word deep Local Store Memories. The LSM is accessed directly by the DMA Subsystem and the neighboring DPUs/Multipliers.
Control Logic Unit (CLU) The Control Logic Unit directly implements finite state machine sequencing and conditional operation. The CLU includes the Programmable Sum-ofProducts(PSOP) and the Control State Memory (CSM). The CSM stores eight user-specified Instructions for each of the seven DPUs in the Tile, where each Instruction represents a complete DPU configuration.. The PSOP implements conditional state sequences on a configurable context basis.
PROGRAMMABLE I/O
RCP includes banks of Programmable I/O (PIO) pins which provide tremendous bandwidth. Each PIO bank of 40 PIO pins delivers 0.5 GBytes/sec I/O bandwidth.
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This technology reconfigures fabric in one clock cycle and increases voice/data/video channels per chip. As mentioned earlier, each Slice can be configured independently. Loading the Background Plane from external memory requires just 3 sec per Slice; this operation does not interfere with active processing on the Fabric. Swapping the Background Plane into the Active Plane requires just one clock cycle. with eConfigurable Technology; the four algorithms are loaded into the entire reconfigurable processing Fabriconeatatime. 2. C~SIDE Development Tools : With this software development tool , Chameleon Systems are providing the ability for the customers to do the programming themselves thus keeping the secrecy of their algorithms. The Chameleon Systems Integrated Development Environment (C~SIDE) is a complete toolkit for designing, debugging and verifying RCP designs. C~Side uses a combined C language and Verilog flow to map algorithms into the chips reconfigurable processing fabric (RPF). The C-SIDE software suite includes tools used to compile C and assembly code for execution on the CS2112's embedded microprocessor, and Verilog simulation and synthesis tools used to create parallel datapath kernels which run on the CS2112's reconfigurable processing fabric. In addition to code generation tools, the package contains sourcelevel debugging tools that support simulation and real-time debugging. Chameleon's design approach leverages the methods employed by most of today's communications system designers. CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 31
The C-SIDE design system is a fully integrated tool suite, with C compiler, Verilog synthesizer, full-chip simulator, as well as a debug and verification environment -- an element not readily found in ASIC and FPGA design flows, according to Chameleon.
3.eBIOS: It provides a interface between the Embedded Processor System and the Fabric. eBIOS provides resource allocation, configuration management and DMA services. The eBIOS calls are automatically generated at compile time, but can be edited for precise control of any function.
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The designer starts with a C program that models signal processing functions of the baseband system. Having identified the dataflow intensive functional blocks, the designer implements them in the RCP to accelerate them by 10- to 100-fold. The designer creates equivalent functions for those blocks, called kernels, in Chameleon's reconfigurable assembly language-like design entry language. The assembler then automatically generates standard Verilog for these kernels that the designer can verify with commercial Verilog simulators.. The designer then integrates the application level C code with Verilog kernels and the rest of the standard C function.Chameleon's C-SIDE compiler and linker technology makes this integration step transparent to the designer. The CS2112 development environment makes all chip registers and memory locations accessible through a development console that enables full processor-like debugging, including features like single-stepping and setting breakpoints. Chameleon's development board enables the designer to connect multiple RCPs to other devices in the system using the PCI bus and/or programmable I/O pins. This helps prove the design concept, and enables the designer to profile the perormance of the whole basestation system in a real-world environment. With telecommunications OEMs facing shrinking product life cycles and increasing market pressures, not to mention the constant flux of protocols and standards, it's more necessary than ever to have a platform that's reconfigurable. This is where the chameleon chips are going to make its effect felt.
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Tabel1.1 : comparision with other technologies Todays system architects have at their disposal an arsenal of highly integrated, high-performance semiconductor technologies, such as applicationspecific integrated circuits (ASICs), application-specific standard products (ASSPs), digital signal processors (DSPs), and field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs). However, system architects continue to struggle with the requirement that communication systems deliver both performance and flexibility. Enter the reconfigurable processor, an entirely new category of semiconductor solution that serves as a system-level platform for a broad range of applications.
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4.6 APPLICATIONS
This application involves high-rate communications, signal processing, and a variety of network protocols and data formats. Its applications are in, data-intensive Internet DSP wireless basestations voice compression software-defined radio high-performance embedded telecom and datacom applications xDSL concentrators fixed wireless local loop CHAMELEON CHIPS Page 35
multiprotocol packet and cell processing protocols Wireless Base stations The reconfigurable technology mainly focuses on base stations and their unpredictable combination of voice and data traffic. Base-station infrastructure will have to be adaptive enough to accommodate those requirements. With a fixed processor the channels must be able to support both simple voice calls and high-bandwidth data connections Wireless Local Loop (WLL) Reconfigurable technology is widely applied in Wireless Local Loops also because of their high processing power, bandwidth and reconfigurable nature.
High-Performance DSL (Digital Subscriber Line Technology) DSL technology brings high Bandwidth to homely users.
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5.CONCLUSION
These new chips called chameleon chips are able to rewire themselves on the fly to create the exact hardware needed to run a piece of software at the utmost speed.an example of such kind of a chip is a chameleon chip.this can also be called a chip on demand Its applications are in, data-intensive Internet,DSP,wireless basestations, voice compression, software-defined radio, high-performance embedded telecom and datacom applications, xDSL concentrators,fixed wireless local loop, multichannel voice compression, multiprotocol packet and cell processing protocols. Its advantages are that it can create customized communications signal processors ,it has increased performance and channel count, and it can more quickly adapt to new requirements and standards and it has lower development costs and reduce risk.
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6.FUTURISTIC DREAM
One day, someone will make a chip that does everything for the ultimate consumer device. The chip will be smart enough to be the brains of a cell phone that can transmit or receive calls anywhere in the world. If the reception is poor, the phone will automatically adjust so that the quality improves. At the same time, the device will also serve as a handheld organizer and a player for music, videos, or games. Unfortunately, that chip doesn't exist today. It would require flexibility high performance low power and low cost But we might be getting closer. Now a new kind of chip may reshape the semiconductor landscape. The chip adapts to any programming task by effectively erasing its hardware design and regenerating new hardware that is perfectly suited to run the software at hand. These chips, referred to as reconfigurable processors, could tilt the balance of power that has preserved a decade-long standoff between programmable chips and hardwired custom chips. These new chips are able to rewire themselves on the fly to create the exact hardware needed to run a piece of software at the utmost speed.an
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example of such kind of a chip is a chameleon chip.this can also be called a chip on demand
Reconfigurable computing goes a step beyond programmable chips in the matter of flexibility. It is not only possible but relatively commonplace to "rewrite" the silicon so that it can perform new functions in a split second. Reconfigurable chips are simply the extreme end of programmability. If these adaptable chips can reach a cost-performance parity with hard-wired chips, customers will chuck the static hard-wired solutions. And if silicon can indeed become dynamic, then so will the gadgets of the information age. No longer will you have to buy a camera and a tape recorder. You could just buy one gadget, and then download a new function for it when you want to take some pictures or make a recording. Just think of the possibilities for the fickle consumer. Programmable logic chips, which are arrays of memory cells that can be programmed to perform hardware functions using software tools, are more flexible than DSP chips but slower and more expensive For consumers, this means that the day isn't far away when a cell phone can be used to talk, transmit video images, connect to the Internet, maintain a calendar, and serve as entertainment during travel delays -- without the need to plug in adapter hardware.
CHAMELEON CHIPS
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REFERENCES
BOOKS
Wei Qin Presentation , Oct 2000 (The part of IEEE conference on Tele-communication,
WEBSITES
CHAMELEON CHIPS
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