Abstract

In FPGA CAD flow, the clustering stage builds the foundation for placement and routing stages and affects performance parameters, such as routability, delay, and channel width significantly. Net sharing and criticality are the two most commonly used factors in clustering cost functions. With this study, we first derive a third term, net-length factor, and then design a generic method for integrating net length into the clustering algorithms. Net-length factor enables characterizing the nets based on the routing stress they might cause during later stages of the CAD flow and is essential for enhancing the routability of the design. We evaluate the effectiveness of integrating net length as a factor into the well-known timing (T-VPack)-, depopulation (T-NDPack)-, and routability (iRAC and T-RPack)-driven clustering algorithms. Through exhaustive experimental studies, we show that net-length factor consistently helps improve the channel-width performance of routability-, depopulation-, and timing-driven clustering algorithms that do not explicitly target low fan-out nets in their cost functions. Particularly, net-length factor leads to average reduction in channel width for T-VPack, T-RPack, and T-NDPack by 11.6%, 10.8%, and 14.2%, respectively, and in a majority of the cases, improves the critical-path delay without increasing the array size.

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