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Chun Hok Ho, Chi Wai Yu, Philip Leong, Wayne Luk and Steven Wilton
received the Stamatis Vassiliadis Award for Outstanding Paper in the
International Conference on Field Programmable Logic and Applications (FPL)
in Amsterdam
Chun Hok Ho, Chi Wai Yu, Philip Leong, Wayne Luk and Steven Wilton
received the Stamatis Vassiliadis Award for Outstanding Paper in the
International Conference on Field Programmable Logic and Applications
(FPL) in Amsterdam. The paper, entitled "Domain-Specific Hybrid FPGA:
Architecture and Floating-Point Applications" proposes an architecture
that can achieve a 2.5 times speed and 18 times area improvement over
conventional FPGA devices.
The FPL conference is the first and largest on FPGA design and
applications. The first two authors are graduates from the Department
of Computer Science and Engineering at the Chinese University of Hong
Kong, both having been supervised by Prof. Philip Leong who is the
Director of the Custom Computing Laboratory. Mr Ho and Mr Yu are now
doing their PhD degrees at Imperial College.
The full paper is available from
here.
ABSTRACT
This paper presents a novel architecture for domain-specific FPGA
devices. This architecture can be optimised for both speed and density
by exploiting domain-specific information to produce efficient
reconfigurable logic with multiple granularity. In the reconfigurable
logic, general-purpose fine-grained units are used for implementing
control logic and bit-oriented operations, while domain-specific
coarse-grained units and heterogeneous blocks are used for implementing
datapaths; the precise amount of each type of resources can be
customised to suit specific application domains. Issues and challenges
associated with the design flow and the architecture modelling are
addressed. Examples of the proposed architecture for speeding up
floating point applications are illustrated. Current results indicate
that the proposed architecture can achieve 2.5 times improvement in
speed and 18 times reduction in area on average, when compared with
traditional FPGA devices on selected floating point benchmark circuits.
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