Abstract

An increase in the number of cores gives a significant bounce in performance than an improvement in any of the factors or hardware. Many core systems use network-on-chip (NoC) for efficient communications among the cores in the system. However, the problem with NoC-based communication is that it significantly consumes a large amount of power and energy because the number of routers increases with the increase in the number of cores in the system. Power consumed by such components leads to degradation of the performance. The placement of cores in the topology is non-deterministic polynomial-time hardness (NP-Hard) problem. The optimal placement of cores in NoC is essential as it minimizes latency and communication costs. Thus, the NP-Hard problem of placing cores is solved using genetic algorithm (GA) based quadtree topology. The proposed work shows the analysis of GA-based quadtree topology, which outperforms other topologies in most aspects. The performance evaluation of GA-based quadtree topology is based on latency, throughput, power, area, bisection bandwidth, and diameter. Comparing these parameters with other topologies shows the prominence of the quadtree topology. The evaluation is performed in the Booksim simulator, and the experimental results revealed that the proposed GA-based quad tree-based topology is efficient for NoC-based communications.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call