Abstract

We summarize the techniques of implementing move-based hypergraph partitioning heuristics and evaluating their performance in the context of VLSI design applications. Our first contribution is a detailed software architecture, consisting of seven reusable components, that allows flexible, efficient and accurate assessment of the practical implications of new move-based algorithms and partitioning formulations. Our second contribution is an assessment of the modern context for hypergraph partitioning research for VLSI design applications. In particular, we discuss the current level of sophistication in implementation know-how and experimental evaluation, and we note how requirements for real-world partitioners - if used as motivation for research - should affect the evaluation of prospective contributions. Two "implicit decisions" in the implementation of the Fiduccia-Mattheyses heuristic are used to illustrate the difficulty of achieving meaningful experimental evaluation of new algorithmic ideas.

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