Abstract

High-level synthesis operates on internal models known as control/data flow graphs (CDFG) and produces a register-transfer-level (RTL) model of the hardware implementation for a given schedule. For high-level synthesis to be efficient it has to estimate the effect that a given algorithmic decision (e.g., scheduling, allocation) will have on the final hardware implementation (after logic synthesis). Currently, this effect cannot be measured accurately because the CDFGs are very distinct from the RTL/gate-level models used by logic synthesis, precluding interaction between high-level and logic synthesis. This paper presents a solution to this problem consisting of a novel internal model for synthesis which spans the domains of high-level and logic synthesis. This model is an RTL/gate-level network capable of representing all possible schedules that a given behavior may assume. This representation allows high-level synthesis algorithms to be formulated as logic transformations and effectively interleaved with logic synthesis.

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