Abstract
Partially dynamic reconfiguration (PDR) technology can accelerate the reconfiguration process and overcome hardware resource constraints when facing the challenge of high performance with respect to applications and resources constraints on field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs). On FPGAs with PDR technology, the available on-chip Block RAM (BRAM) resources may not satisfy the memory requirements for all data. If we reserve more BRAM resources, then the total area of the dynamically reconfigurable region (DRR) that is used for calculation will decrease, with a reduction in system performance. We propose a memory-aware optimization framework to search for the optimal solution considering partitioning, scheduling, and floorplanning, where we make a tradeoff between performance and on-chip memory resources utilization. We then propose methods for memory allocation: An ILP model and a heuristic algorithm are provided to determine the minimum memory requirements and the number of corresponding memory blocks for data, as well as to determine whether the memory block with its stored data is assigned on-chip or off-chip by formulating the problem into a 0-1 knapsack problem and solving it using dynamic programming. Experimental results show that the memory-aware optimization framework and methods of memory allocation can increase the amount of on-chip data access to 29.65% of the total data volume with guaranteed performance.
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More From: ACM Transactions on Design Automation of Electronic Systems
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