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Mohammad ZALFANY URFIANTO Tsuyoshi ISSHIKI Arif ULLAH KHAN Dongju LI Hiroaki KUNIEDA
This paper presents a Multiprocessor System-on-Chips (MPSoC) architecture used as an execution platform for the new C-language based MPSoC design framework we are currently developing. The MPSoC architecture is based on an existing SoC platform with a commercial RISC core acting as the host CPU. We extend the existing SoC with a multiprocessor-array block that is used as the main engine to run parallel applications modeled in our design framework. Utilizing several optimizations provided by our compiler, an efficient inter-communication between processing elements with minimum overhead is implemented. A host-interface is designed to integrate the existing RISC core to the multiprocessor-array. The experimental results show that an efficacious integration is achieved, proving that the designed communication module can be used to efficiently incorporate off-the-shelf processors as a processing element for MPSoC architectures designed using our framework.
Mohammad ZALFANY URFIANTO Tsuyoshi ISSHIKI Arif ULLAH KHAN Dongju LI Hiroaki KUNIEDA
A simple extension used to assist the decomposition of task-level concurrency within C programs is presented in this paper. The concurrency decomposition is meant to be used as the point of entry for Multiprocessor System-on-Chips (MPSoC) architectures' design-flow. Our methodology allows the (re)use of readily available reference C programs and enables easy and rapid exploration for various alternatives of task partitioning strategies; a crucial task that greatly influences the overall quality of the designed MPSoC. A test case using a JPEG encoder application has been performed and the results are presented in this paper.
Hao XIAO Tsuyoshi ISSHIKI Arif Ullah KHAN Dongju LI Hiroaki KUNIEDA Yuko NAKASE Sadahiro KIMURA
Ultra-wideband (UWB) technology has attracted much attention recently due to its high data rate and low emission power. Its media access control (MAC) protocol, WiMedia MAC, promises a lot of facilities for high-speed and high-quality wireless communication. However, these benefits in turn involve a large amount of computational load, which challenges the traditional uniprocessor architecture based implementation method to provide the required performance. However, the constrained cost and power budget, on the other hand, makes using commercial multiprocessor solutions unrealistic. In this paper, a low-cost and energy-efficient multiprocessor system-on-chip (MPSoC), which tackles at once the aspects of system design, software migration and hardware architecture, is presented for the implementation of UWB MAC layer. Experimental results show that the proposed MPSoC, based on four simple RISC processors and shared-memory infrastructure, achieves up to 45% performance improvement and 65% power saving, but takes 15% less area than the uniprocessor implementation.