Abstract

Modern FPGA System-on-Chips (SoCs) embed large FPGA logics capable of hosting multiple hardware accelerators. Typically, hardware accelerators require direct access to the shared DRAM memory for reaching the high performance demanded by modern applications. In commercial FPGA SoCs, this goal is achieved by interconnecting the hardware accelerators on an interconnect based on AMBA AXI, which is the de-facto industrial standard for on-chip communications. The AXI standard provides great flexibility in the definition of the network topology. Nevertheless, such flexibility generates a significant unpredictability when attempting to bound the hardware accelerators’ response time when executing under contention. This work focus on bounding the worst-case memory access time of hardware accelerators deployed on commercial FPGA SoCs. We propose a modeling and analysis technique to bound the response time of the hardware accelerators and evaluate the schedulability of a system applicable to arbitrary AXI-based bus structures deployed on FPGA SoCs. Our results are validated on real execution traces collected on two popular FPGA SoCs belonging to the Xilinx ZYNQ-7000 and Zynq-Ultrascale+ families and by simulated results.

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