Abstract
Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) can yield higher performance and lower power than software solutions on CPUs or GPUs. However, designing with FPGAs requires specialized hardware design skills and hours-long CAD processing times. To reduce and accelerate the design effort, we can implement an overlay architecture on the FPGA, on which we then more easily construct the desired system but at a large cost in performance and area relative to a direct FPGA implementation. In this work, we compare the micro-architecture, performance, and area of two soft-processor overlays: the Octavo multi-threaded soft-processor and the MXP soft vector processor. To measure the area and performance penalties of these overlays relative to the underlying FPGA hardware, we compare direct FPGA implementations of the micro-benchmarks written in C synthesized with the LegUp HLS tool and also written in the Verilog HDL. Overall, Octavo’s higher operating frequency and MXP’s more efficient code execution results in similar performance from both, within an order of magnitude of direct FPGA implementations, but with a penalty of an order of magnitude greater area.
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More From: ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems
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