1 |
HIGH LEVEL SYNTHSIS FOR A NETWORK ON CHIP TOPOLOGYAli, Baraa Saeed 01 May 2013 (has links)
Network on chips (NoCs) have emerged as a panacea to solve many intercommunication issues that are imposed by the fast growing of VLSI design. NOC have been deployed as a solution for the communication delay between cores, area overhead, power consumption, etc. One of the leading parameters of speeding up the performance of system on chips (SOCs) is the efficiency of scheduling algorithms for the applications running on a SOC. In this thesis we are arguing that a global scheduling view can significantly improve latency in NoCs. This view can be achieved by having the NoC nodes communicate with each other in a predefined application-based fashion; by calculating in advance how many clock cycles the nodes need to execute and transmit packets to the network and how many clock cycles are needed for the packets to travel all the way to the destination through routers (including queuing delay). By knowing that, we could keep some of the cores stay in "Hold-On" state until the right time comes to start transmitting. This technique could lead to reduced congestion and it may guarantee that the cores do not suffer from severe resource contention, e.g. accessing memory. This task is achieved by using a network simulator (such as OPNET) and gathering statistics, so the worst case latency can be determined. Therefore, if NoC nodes can somehow postpone sending packets in a way that does not violate the deadline of their tasks, packet dropping or livelock can be avoided. It is assumed that the NoC nodes here need buffers of their own in order to hold the ready-to-transmit packets and this can be the cost of this approach.
|
2 |
Estimativa de desempenho de uma NoC a partir de seu modelo em SYSTEMC-TLM. / A NoC performance evaluation from a SYSTEMC - TLM model.Sepúlveda Flórez, Martha Johanna 16 October 2006 (has links)
The wide variety of interconnection structures presently nowadays for SoC (Systemon- Chip), bus and networks-on-Chip NoCs, each of them with a wide set of setup parameters, provides a huge amount of design alternatives. Although the interconnection structure is a key SoC component, there are few design tools in order to set the appropriate configuration parameters for a given application. An efficient SoC project may comply an exploration stage among the possible solutions for the communication structure, during the first steps of the design process. The absence of appropriate tools for that exploration makes critical the designer?s judgment. The present study aims to enhance the communication SoC structure design area, when a NoC is used. This work proposes a methodology that allows the establishment of the NoC communication parameters using a high level model (SystemC TLM timed). Our approach analyzes and evaluates the NoC performance under a wide variety of traffic conditions. The experimental stage was conducted employing a model of a net represented by a SystemC TLM timed (Hermes_Temp). Parametric and pseudo-random generators control the network traffic. The analysis was carried on with a tool designed for these purpose, which generates a group of performance metrics. The results allow to elucidate the global and inner network behavior. The performance values are useful for the heterogeneous and homogeneous NoC design projects, improving the performance evaluation studies scope. / The wide variety of interconnection structures presently nowadays for SoC (Systemon- Chip), bus and networks-on-Chip NoCs, each of them with a wide set of setup parameters, provides a huge amount of design alternatives. Although the interconnection structure is a key SoC component, there are few design tools in order to set the appropriate configuration parameters for a given application. An efficient SoC project may comply an exploration stage among the possible solutions for the communication structure, during the first steps of the design process. The absence of appropriate tools for that exploration makes critical the designer?s judgment. The present study aims to enhance the communication SoC structure design area, when a NoC is used. This work proposes a methodology that allows the establishment of the NoC communication parameters using a high level model (SystemC TLM timed). Our approach analyzes and evaluates the NoC performance under a wide variety of traffic conditions. The experimental stage was conducted employing a model of a net represented by a SystemC TLM timed (Hermes_Temp). Parametric and pseudo-random generators control the network traffic. The analysis was carried on with a tool designed for these purpose, which generates a group of performance metrics. The results allow to elucidate the global and inner network behavior. The performance values are useful for the heterogeneous and homogeneous NoC design projects, improving the performance evaluation studies scope.
|
3 |
Estimativa de desempenho de uma NoC a partir de seu modelo em SYSTEMC-TLM. / A NoC performance evaluation from a SYSTEMC - TLM model.Martha Johanna Sepúlveda Flórez 16 October 2006 (has links)
The wide variety of interconnection structures presently nowadays for SoC (Systemon- Chip), bus and networks-on-Chip NoCs, each of them with a wide set of setup parameters, provides a huge amount of design alternatives. Although the interconnection structure is a key SoC component, there are few design tools in order to set the appropriate configuration parameters for a given application. An efficient SoC project may comply an exploration stage among the possible solutions for the communication structure, during the first steps of the design process. The absence of appropriate tools for that exploration makes critical the designer?s judgment. The present study aims to enhance the communication SoC structure design area, when a NoC is used. This work proposes a methodology that allows the establishment of the NoC communication parameters using a high level model (SystemC TLM timed). Our approach analyzes and evaluates the NoC performance under a wide variety of traffic conditions. The experimental stage was conducted employing a model of a net represented by a SystemC TLM timed (Hermes_Temp). Parametric and pseudo-random generators control the network traffic. The analysis was carried on with a tool designed for these purpose, which generates a group of performance metrics. The results allow to elucidate the global and inner network behavior. The performance values are useful for the heterogeneous and homogeneous NoC design projects, improving the performance evaluation studies scope. / The wide variety of interconnection structures presently nowadays for SoC (Systemon- Chip), bus and networks-on-Chip NoCs, each of them with a wide set of setup parameters, provides a huge amount of design alternatives. Although the interconnection structure is a key SoC component, there are few design tools in order to set the appropriate configuration parameters for a given application. An efficient SoC project may comply an exploration stage among the possible solutions for the communication structure, during the first steps of the design process. The absence of appropriate tools for that exploration makes critical the designer?s judgment. The present study aims to enhance the communication SoC structure design area, when a NoC is used. This work proposes a methodology that allows the establishment of the NoC communication parameters using a high level model (SystemC TLM timed). Our approach analyzes and evaluates the NoC performance under a wide variety of traffic conditions. The experimental stage was conducted employing a model of a net represented by a SystemC TLM timed (Hermes_Temp). Parametric and pseudo-random generators control the network traffic. The analysis was carried on with a tool designed for these purpose, which generates a group of performance metrics. The results allow to elucidate the global and inner network behavior. The performance values are useful for the heterogeneous and homogeneous NoC design projects, improving the performance evaluation studies scope.
|
4 |
Performance and Energy Efficient Network-on-Chip ArchitecturesVangal, Sriram January 2007 (has links)
The scaling of MOS transistors into the nanometer regime opens the possibility for creating large Network-on-Chip (NoC) architectures containing hundreds of integrated processing elements with on-chip communication. NoC architectures, with structured on-chip networks are emerging as a scalable and modular solution to global communications within large systems-on-chip. NoCs mitigate the emerging wire-delay problem and addresses the need for substantial interconnect bandwidth by replacing today’s shared buses with packet-switched router networks. With on-chip communication consuming a significant portion of the chip power and area budgets, there is a compelling need for compact, low power routers. While applications dictate the choice of the compute core, the advent of multimedia applications, such as three-dimensional (3D) graphics and signal processing, places stronger demands for self-contained, low-latency floating-point processors with increased throughput. This work demonstrates that a computational fabric built using optimized building blocks can provide high levels of performance in an energy efficient manner. The thesis details an integrated 80- Tile NoC architecture implemented in a 65-nm process technology. The prototype is designed to deliver over 1.0TFLOPS of performance while dissipating less than 100W. This thesis first presents a six-port four-lane 57 GB/s non-blocking router core based on wormhole switching. The router features double-pumped crossbar channels and destinationaware channel drivers that dynamically configure based on the current packet destination. This enables 45% reduction in crossbar channel area, 23% overall router area, up to 3.8X reduction in peak channel power, and 7.2% improvement in average channel power. In a 150-nm sixmetal CMOS process, the 12.2 mm2 router contains 1.9-million transistors and operates at 1 GHz at 1.2 V supply. We next describe a new pipelined single-precision floating-point multiply accumulator core (FPMAC) featuring a single-cycle accumulation loop using base 32 and internal carry-save arithmetic, with delayed addition techniques. A combination of algorithmic, logic and circuit techniques enable multiply-accumulate operations at speeds exceeding 3GHz, with singlecycle throughput. This approach reduces the latency of dependent FPMAC instructions and enables a sustained multiply-add result (2FLOPS) every cycle. The optimizations allow removal of the costly normalization step from the critical accumulation loop and conditionally powered down using dynamic sleep transistors on long accumulate operations, saving active and leakage power. In a 90-nm seven-metal dual-VT CMOS process, the 2 mm2 custom design contains 230-K transistors. Silicon achieves 6.2-GFLOPS of performance while dissipating 1.2 W at 3.1 GHz, 1.3 V supply. We finally present the industry's first single-chip programmable teraFLOPS processor. The NoC architecture contains 80 tiles arranged as an 8×10 2D array of floating-point cores and packet-switched routers, both designed to operate at 4 GHz. Each tile has two pipelined singleprecision FPMAC units which feature a single-cycle accumulation loop for high throughput. The five-port router combines 100 GB/s of raw bandwidth with low fall-through latency under 1ns. The on-chip 2D mesh network provides a bisection bandwidth of 2 Tera-bits/s. The 15-FO4 design employs mesochronous clocking, fine-grained clock gating, dynamic sleep transistors, and body-bias techniques. In a 65-nm eight-metal CMOS process, the 275 mm2 custom design contains 100-M transistors. The fully functional first silicon achieves over 1.0TFLOPS of performance on a range of benchmarks while dissipating 97 W at 4.27 GHz and 1.07-V supply. It is clear that realization of successful NoC designs require well balanced decisions at all levels: architecture, logic, circuit and physical design. Our results demonstrate that the NoC architecture successfully delivers on its promise of greater integration, high performance, good scalability and high energy efficiency.
|
5 |
A Novel Prototyping and Evaluation Framework for NoC-Based MPSoCTatas, K., Siozios, K., Bartzas, A., Kyriacou, Costas, Soudris, D. January 2013 (has links)
No / This paper presents a framework for high-level exploration, Register Transfer-Level (RTL) design and rapid prototyping of Network-on-Chip (NoC) architectures. From the high-level exploration, a selected NoC topology is derived, which is then implemented in RTL using an automated design flow. Furthermore, for verification purposes, appropriate self-checking testbenches for the verification of the RTL and architecture files for the semi-automatic implementation of the system in Xilinx EDK are also generated, significantly reducing design and verification time, and therefore Non-Recurring Engineering (NRE) cost. Simulation and FPGA implementation results are given for four case studies multimedia applications, proving the validity of the proposed approach.
|
6 |
Communication centric platforms for future high data intensive applicationsAhmad, Balal January 2009 (has links)
The notion of platform based design is considered as a viable solution to boost the design productivity by favouring reuse design methodology. With the scaling down of device feature size and scaling up of design complexity, throughput limitations, signal integrity and signal latency are becoming a bottleneck in future communication centric System-on-Chip (SoC) design. This has given birth to communication centric platform based designs. Development of heterogeneous multi-core architectures has caused the on-chip communication medium tailored for a specific application domain to deal with multidomain traffic patterns. This makes the current application specific communication centric platforms unsuitable for future SoC architectures. The work presented in this thesis, endeavours to explore the current communication media to establish the expectations from future on-chip interconnects. A novel communication centric platform based design flow is proposed, which consists of four communication centric platforms that are based on shared global bus, hierarchical bus, crossbars and a novel hybrid communication medium. Developed with a smart platform controller, the platforms support Open Core Protocol (OCP) socket standard, allowing cores to integrate in a plug and play fashion without the need to reprogram the pre-verified platforms. This drastically reduces the design time of SoC architectures. Each communication centric platform has different throughput, area and power characteristics, thus, depending on the design constraints, processing cores can be integrated to the most appropriate communication platform to realise the desired SoC architecture. A novel hybrid communication medium is also developed in this thesis, which combines the advantages of two different types of communication media in a single SoC architecture. The hybrid communication medium consists of crossbar matrix and shared bus medium . Simulation results and implementation of WiMAX receiver as a real-life example shows a 65% increase in data throughput than shared bus based communication medium, 13% decrease in area and 11% decrease in power than crossbar based communication medium. In order to automate the generation of SoC architectures with optimised communication architectures, a tool called SOCCAD (SoC Communication architecture development) is developed. Components needed for the realisation of the given application can be selected from the tool’s in-built library. Offering an optimised communication centric placement, the tool generates the complete SystemC code for the system with different interconnect architectures, along with its power and area characteristics. The generated SystemC code can be used for quick simulation and coupled with efficient test benches can be used for quick verification. Network-on-Chip (NoC) is considered as a solution to the communication bottleneck in future SoC architectures with data throughput requirements of over 10GB/s. It aims to provide low power, efficient link utilisation, reduced data contention and reduced area on silicon. Current on-chip networks, developed with fixed architectural parameters, do not utilise the available resources efficiently. To increase this efficiency, a novel dynamically reconfigurable NoC (drNoC) is developed in this thesis. The proposed drNoC reconfigures itself in terms of switching, routing and packet size with the changing communication requirements of the system at run time, thus utilising the maximum available channel bandwidth. In order to increase the applicability of drNoC, the network interface is designed to support OCP socket standard. This makes drNoC a highly reuseable communication framework, qualifying it as a communication centric platform for high data intensive SoC architectures. Simulation results show a 32% increase in data throughput and 22-35% decrease in network delay when compared with a traditional NoC with fixed parameters.
|
7 |
Conception d'un micro-réseau intégré NOC tolérant les fautes multiples statiques et dynamiques / Design of a network on chip (NoC) that tolerates multiple static and dynamic faultsGang, Yi 05 November 2015 (has links)
Les progrès dans les technologies à base de semi-conducteurs et la demande croissante de puissance de calcul poussent vers une intégration dans une même puce de plus en plus de processeurs intégrés. Par conséquent les réseaux sur puce remplacent progressivement les bus de communication, ceux-ci offrant plus de débit et permettant une mise à l'échelle simplifiée. Parallèlement, la réduction de la finesse de gravure entraine une augmentation de la sensibilité des circuits au processus de fabrication et à son environnement d'utilisation. Les défauts de fabrication et le taux de défaillances pendant la durée de vie du circuit augmentent lorsque l'on passe d'une technologie à une autre. Intégrer des techniques de tolérance aux fautes dans un circuit devient indispensable, en particulier pour les circuits évoluant dans un environnement très sensible (aérospatial, automobile, santé, ...). Nous présentons dans ce travail de thèse, des techniques permettant d'améliorer la tolérance aux fautes des micro-réseaux intégrés dans des circuits évoluant dans un environnement difficile. Le NoC doit ainsi être capable de s'affranchir de la présence de nombreuses fautes. Les travaux publiés jusqu'ici proposaient des solutions pour un seul type de faute. En considérant les contraintes de surface et de consommation du domaine de l'embarqué, nous avons proposé un algorithme de routage adaptatif tolérant à la fois les fautes intermittentes, transitoires et permanentes. En combinant et adaptant des techniques existantes de retransmission de flits, de fragmentation et de regroupement de paquet, notre approche permet de s'affranchir de nombreuses fautes statiques et dynamiques. Les très nombreuses simulations réalisées ont permis de montrer entre autre que, l'algorithme proposé permet d'atteindre un taux de livraison de paquets de 97,68% pour un NoC 16x16 en maille 2D en présence de 384 liens défectueux simultanés, et 93,40% lorsque 103 routeurs sont défaillants. Nous avons étendu l'algorithme aux topologies de type tore avec des résultats bien meilleurs.Une autre originalité de cette thèse est que nous avons inclus dans cet algorithme une fonction de gestion de la congestion. Pour cela nous avons défini une nouvelle métrique de mesure de la congestion (Flit Remain) plus pertinente que les métriques utilisées et publiées jusqu'ici. Les expériences ont montré que l'utilisation de cette métrique permet de réduire la latence (au niveau du pic de saturation) de 2,5 % à 16,1 %, selon le type de trafic généré, par rapport à la plus efficace des métriques existante. La combinaison du routage adaptatif tolérant les fautes statiques et dynamiques et la gestion de la congestion offrent une solution qui permet d'avoir un NoC et par extension un circuit beaucoup plus résilient. / The quest for higher-performance and low-power consumption has driven the microelectronics' industry race towards aggressive technology scaling and multicore chip designs. In this many-core era, the Network-on-chip (NoCs) becomes the most promising solution for on-chip communication because of its performance scaling with the number of IPs integrated in the chip.Fault tolerance becomes mandatory as the CMOS technology continues shrinking down. The yield and the reliability are more and more affected by factors such as manufacturing defects, process variations, environment variations, cosmic radiations, and so on. As a result, the designs should be able to provide full functionality (e.g. critical systems), or at least allow degraded mode in a context of high failure rates. To accomplish this, the systems should be able to adapt to manufacturing and runtime failures.In this thesis, some techniques are proposed to improve the fault tolerance ability of NoC based circuits working in harsh environments. As previous works allow the handling of one type of fault at a time, we propose here a solution where different kinds of faults can be tolerated concurrently.Considering constraints such as area and power consumption, a fault tolerant adaptive routing algorithm was proposed, which can cope with transient, intermittent and permanent faults. Combined with some existing techniques, like flit retransmission and packet fragmentation, this approach allows tolerating numerous static and dynamic faults. Simulations results show that the proposed solution allows a high packet delivery success rate: for a 16x16 2D Mesh NoC, 97.68% in the presence of 384 simultaneous link faults, and 93.40% with the presence of 103 simultaneous router faults. This success rate is even higher when this algorithm is extended to NoCs with Tore topology. Another contribution of this thesis is the inclusion of a congestion management function in the proposed routing algorithm. For this purpose, we introduce a novel metric of congestion measurement named Flit Remain. The experimental results show that using this new congestion metric allows a reduction of the average latency of the Network on Chip from 2.5% to 16.1% when compared to the existing metrics.The combination of static and dynamic fault tolerant and adaptive routing and the congestion management offers a solution, which allows designing a NoC highly resilient.
|
8 |
NoC Design & Optimization of Multicore Media ProcessorsBasavaraj, T January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Network on Chips[1][2][3][4] are critical elements of modern System on Chip(SoC) as well as Chip Multiprocessor(CMP)designs. Network on Chips (NoCs) help manage high complexity of designing large chips by decoupling computation from communication. SoCs and CMPs have a multiplicity of communicating entities like programmable processing elements, hardware acceleration engines, memory blocks as well as off-chip interfaces. With power having become a serious design constraint[5], there is a great need for designing NoC which meets the target communication requirements, while minimizing power using all the tricks available at the architecture, microarchitecture and circuit levels of the de-sign. This thesis presents a holistic, QoS based, power optimal design solution of a NoC inside a CMP taking into account link microarchitecture and processor tile configurations.
Guaranteeing QoS by NoCs involves guaranteeing bandwidth and throughput for connections and deterministic latencies in communication paths. Label Switching based Network-on-Chip(LS-NoC) uses a centralized LS-NoC Management framework that engineers traffic into QoS guaranteed routes. LS-NoC uses label switching, enables band-width reservation, allows physical link sharing and leverages advantages of both packet and circuit switching techniques. A flow identification algorithm takes into account band-width available in individual links to establish QoS guaranteed routes. LS-NoC caters to the requirements of streaming applications where communication channels are fixed over the lifetime of the application. The proposed NoC framework inherently supports heterogeneous and ad-hoc SoC designs.
A multicast, broadcast capable label switched router for the LS-NoC has been de-signed, verified, synthesized, placed and routed and timing analyzed. A 5 port, 256 bit data bus, 4 bit label router occupies 0.431 mm2 in 130nm and delivers peak band-width of80Gbits/s per link at312.5MHz. LS Router is estimated to consume 43.08 mW. Bandwidth and latency guarantees of LS-NoC have been demonstrated on streaming applications like Hiper LAN/2 and Object Recognition Processor, Constant Bit Rate traffic patterns and video decoder traffic representing Variable Bit Rate traffic. LS-NoC was found to have a competitive figure of merit with state-of-the-art NoCs providing QoS. We envision the use of LS-NoC in general purpose CMPs where applications demand deterministic latencies and hard bandwidth requirements.
Design variables for interconnect exploration include wire width, wire spacing, repeater size and spacing, degree of pipelining, supply, threshold voltage, activity and coupling factors. An optimal link configuration in terms of number of pipeline stages for a given length of link and desired operating frequency is arrived at. Optimal configurations of all links in the NoC are identified and a power-performance optimal NoC is presented. We presents a latency, power and performance trade-off study of NoCs using link microarchitecture exploration. The design and implementation of a framework for such a design space exploration study is also presented. We present the trade-off study on NoCs by varying microarchitectural(e.g. pipelining) and circuit level(e.g. frequency and voltage) parameters.
A System-C based NoC exploration framework is used to explore impacts of various architectural and microarchitectural level parameters of NoC elements on power and performance of the NoC. The framework enables the designer to choose from a variety of architectural options like topology, routing policy, etc., as well as allows experimentation with various microarchitectural options for the individual links like length, wire width, pitch, pipelining, supply voltage and frequency. The framework also supports a flexible traffic generation and communication model. Latency, power and throughput results using this framework to study a 4x4 CMP are presented. The framework is used to study NoC designs of a CMP using different classes of parallel computing benchmarks[6].
One of the key findings is that the average latency of a link can be reduced by increasing pipeline depth to a certain extent, as it enables link operation at higher link frequencies.
Abstract
There exists an optimum degree of pipelining which minimizes the energy-delay product of the link. In a 2D Torus when the longest link is pipelined by 4 stages at which point least latency(1.56 times minimum) is achieved and power(40% of max) and throughput (64%of max) are nominal. Using frequency scaling experiments, power variations of up to40%,26.6% and24% can be seen in 2D Torus, Reduced 2D Torus and Tree based NoC between various pipeline configurations to achieve same frequency at constant voltages. Also in some cases, we find that switching to a higher pipelining configuration can actually help reduce power as the links can be designed with smaller repeaters. We also find that the overall performance of the ICNs is determined by the lengths of the links needed to support the communication patterns. Thus the mesh seems to perform the best amongst the three topologies(Mesh, Torus and Folded Torus) considered in case studies.
The effects of communication overheads on performance, power and energy of a multiprocessor chip using L1,L2 cache sizes as primary exploration parameters using accurate interconnect, processor, on-chip and off-chip memory modelling are presented. On-chip and off-chip communication times have significant impact on execution time and the energy efficiency of CMPs. Large cache simply larger tile area that result in longer inter-tile communication link lengths and latencies, thus adversely impacting communication time. Smaller caches potentially have higher number of misses and frequent of off-tile communication. Energy efficient tile design is a configuration exploration and trade-off study using different cache sizes and tile areas to identify a power-performance optimal configuration for the CMP.
Trade-offs are explored using a detailed, cycle accurate, multicore simulation frame-work which includes superscalar processor cores, cache coherent memory hierarchies, on-chip point-to-point communication networks and detailed interconnect model including pipelining and latency. Sapphire, a detailed multiprocessor execution environment integrating SESC, Ruby and DRAM Sim was used to run applications from the Splash2 benchmark(64KpointFFT).Link latencies are estimated for a16 core CMP simulation on Sapphire. Each tile has a single processor, L1 and L2 caches and a router. Different sizesofL1 andL2lead to different tile clock speeds, tile miss rates and tile area and hence interconnect latency.
Simulations across various L1, L2 sizes indicate that the tile configuration that maximizes energy efficiency is related to minimizing communication time. Experiments also indicate different optimal tile configurations for performance, energy and energy efficiency. Clustered interconnection network, communication aware cache bank mapping and thread mapping to physical cores are also explored as potential energy saving solutions. Results indicate that ignoring link latencies can lead to large errors in estimates of program completion times, of up to 17%. Performance optimal configurations are achieved at lower L1 caches and at moderateL2 cache sizes due to higher operating frequencies and smaller link lengths and comparatively lesser communication. Using minimal L1 cache size to operate at the highest frequency may not always be the performance-power optimal choice. Larger L1 sizes, despite a drop in frequency, offer a energy advantage due to lesser communication due to misses.
Clustered tile placement experiments for FFT show considerable performance per watt improvement (1.2%). Remapping most accessed L2 banks by a process in the same core or neighbouring cores after communication traffic analysis offers power and performance advantages. Remapped processes and banks in clustered tile placement show a performance per watt improvement of5.25% and energy reductionof2.53%. This suggests that processors could execute a program in multiple modes, for example, minimum energy, maximum performance.
|
9 |
Projeto de estruturas de comunicação intrachip baseadas em NoC que implementam serviços de QoS e segurança. / Design of NoC-Based communication structure that implements Quality and Security servicesMartha Johanna Sepúlveda Flórez 27 July 2011 (has links)
Os atuais sistemas eletrônicos desenvolvidos na forma de SoCs (Sistemas-sobre-Silício) são caracterizados pelo incremento de informação crítica que é capturada, armazenada e processada. Com a introdução dos SoCs nos sistemas distribuídos que promovem o compartilhamento dos recursos, a segurança vem se transformando num requisito de projeto extremamente importante. Os atuais SoCs são alvo de ataques. O desafio consiste em projetar um SoC seguro que satisfaça os requisitos de segurança e desempenho, próprios para cada aplicação. A estrutura de comunicação está se tornando o coração do SoC. Esta possui um impacto significativo no desempenho do sistema. A inclusão de serviços de segurança na estrutura de comunicação é vantajosa devido à sua capacidade de: 1) monitorar a informação transmitida; 2) detectar violações; 3) bloquear ataques; e 4) fornecer informações para diagnóstico e ativação de mecanismos de recuperação e defesa. O presente trabalho propõe a implementação do conceito de QoSS (Qualidade do Serviço de Segurança) no projeto da estrutura de comunicação baseada em redes intrachip (NoCs, Network-on-Chip). QoSS permite a inclusão da segurança como uma dimensão de QoS (Quality-of-Sevice), admitindo a existência de diferentes níveis de proteção. A adoção do QoSS no projeto das NoCs permite a exploração do espaço de projeto das NoCs levando em consideração o compromisso entre a segurança do sistema e o desempenho do sistema. A inclusão do QoSS na NoC é realizada através de uma metodologia que inclui 5 etapas: definição, descrição, implementação, avaliação e otimização. Como resultado é obtido um conjunto de NoCsQoSS que satisfazem os requisitos de segurança e desempenho do sistema. Criamos neste trabalho o ambiente de simulação APOLLO que fornece suporte na rápida exploração do espaço de soluções a partir de modelos SystemC-TLM do SoC. Neste trabalho, apresentamos três estudos de caso que utilizam a nossa metodologia de projeto de NoCs com QoSS na implementação de políticas de segurança estática e dinâmica. Os serviços de segurança de controle de acesso e autenticação foram implementados de duas formas: na interface da rede e no roteador. Realizamos a avaliação da eficácia e eficiência das NoCs resultantes sob diferentes condições de ataques e de tráfego, resultado da variação topológica do tráfego, natureza e tipo de tráfego. Mostramos que a implementação da segurança no roteador é mais eficiente que a implementação na interface da rede em termos de latência e potência sob todas as diferentes condições de tráfego. Porém, a utilização na interface permite a inclusão das características da segurança na NoC de uma maneira mais simples. Desta forma para sistemas complexos a implementação na interface é vantajosa. / As embedded electronic systems are pervading our lives, security is emerging as an extremely important design requirement. Due to the increasing complexity, intrinsic embedded constraints and strict requirements, security and performance are considered challenging tasks. Most of the current electronic systems embedded in a SoC (System-on-Chip) are used to capture, store, manipulate and access sensitive data and perform several critical functions without security guarantee. The challenge is to provide SoC security that allows a trustworthy system that meets the security and performance requirements. As security requirements vary dramatically for different applications, differentiated security services are necessary. The SoC communication structure is becoming the heart of the SoC. It has a significant impact on the overall system performance. The security services integration at the communication structure take advantage of its wide system visibility and critical role in enabling the system operation. It is able to: 1) monitor data transfer; 2) detect attacks; 3) block attacks; and 4) supply information for trigger suitable recovery mechanisms. This work proposes the implementation of the QoSS (Quality-of-Security-Service) concept at the NoC-based communication structure design. QoSS is a novel concept for data protection that introduces security as a dimension of QoS. In contrast with previous works, the different security levels deployment allow a best trade-of the system security and performance requirements. The QoSS integration is carried out trough a 5 step methodology: definition, description, implementation, evaluation and optimization. As a result a set of NoCs-QoSS that satisfies the security and performance requirements are obtained. We use the framework APOLLO that integrates a set of tools, allowing the fast exploration of the huge NoC design space. In this work we present 2 study cases that uses our methodology in order to design a NoC-QoSS that supports static and a dynamic security policies and also satisfies the security and performance requirements. Two security services: Access Control and authentication are implemented at the NoC interface and at the NoC router. The final configurations are evaluated under different traffic and attack conditions. We show that the security implementation at the router is latency and power consumption efficient that the implementation at the network interface under all the traffic conditions. However, the security implementation at the network interface allows the integration of the security characteristics in a simpler way.
|
10 |
Projeto de estruturas de comunicação intrachip baseadas em NoC que implementam serviços de QoS e segurança. / Design of NoC-Based communication structure that implements Quality and Security servicesSepúlveda Flórez, Martha Johanna 27 July 2011 (has links)
Os atuais sistemas eletrônicos desenvolvidos na forma de SoCs (Sistemas-sobre-Silício) são caracterizados pelo incremento de informação crítica que é capturada, armazenada e processada. Com a introdução dos SoCs nos sistemas distribuídos que promovem o compartilhamento dos recursos, a segurança vem se transformando num requisito de projeto extremamente importante. Os atuais SoCs são alvo de ataques. O desafio consiste em projetar um SoC seguro que satisfaça os requisitos de segurança e desempenho, próprios para cada aplicação. A estrutura de comunicação está se tornando o coração do SoC. Esta possui um impacto significativo no desempenho do sistema. A inclusão de serviços de segurança na estrutura de comunicação é vantajosa devido à sua capacidade de: 1) monitorar a informação transmitida; 2) detectar violações; 3) bloquear ataques; e 4) fornecer informações para diagnóstico e ativação de mecanismos de recuperação e defesa. O presente trabalho propõe a implementação do conceito de QoSS (Qualidade do Serviço de Segurança) no projeto da estrutura de comunicação baseada em redes intrachip (NoCs, Network-on-Chip). QoSS permite a inclusão da segurança como uma dimensão de QoS (Quality-of-Sevice), admitindo a existência de diferentes níveis de proteção. A adoção do QoSS no projeto das NoCs permite a exploração do espaço de projeto das NoCs levando em consideração o compromisso entre a segurança do sistema e o desempenho do sistema. A inclusão do QoSS na NoC é realizada através de uma metodologia que inclui 5 etapas: definição, descrição, implementação, avaliação e otimização. Como resultado é obtido um conjunto de NoCsQoSS que satisfazem os requisitos de segurança e desempenho do sistema. Criamos neste trabalho o ambiente de simulação APOLLO que fornece suporte na rápida exploração do espaço de soluções a partir de modelos SystemC-TLM do SoC. Neste trabalho, apresentamos três estudos de caso que utilizam a nossa metodologia de projeto de NoCs com QoSS na implementação de políticas de segurança estática e dinâmica. Os serviços de segurança de controle de acesso e autenticação foram implementados de duas formas: na interface da rede e no roteador. Realizamos a avaliação da eficácia e eficiência das NoCs resultantes sob diferentes condições de ataques e de tráfego, resultado da variação topológica do tráfego, natureza e tipo de tráfego. Mostramos que a implementação da segurança no roteador é mais eficiente que a implementação na interface da rede em termos de latência e potência sob todas as diferentes condições de tráfego. Porém, a utilização na interface permite a inclusão das características da segurança na NoC de uma maneira mais simples. Desta forma para sistemas complexos a implementação na interface é vantajosa. / As embedded electronic systems are pervading our lives, security is emerging as an extremely important design requirement. Due to the increasing complexity, intrinsic embedded constraints and strict requirements, security and performance are considered challenging tasks. Most of the current electronic systems embedded in a SoC (System-on-Chip) are used to capture, store, manipulate and access sensitive data and perform several critical functions without security guarantee. The challenge is to provide SoC security that allows a trustworthy system that meets the security and performance requirements. As security requirements vary dramatically for different applications, differentiated security services are necessary. The SoC communication structure is becoming the heart of the SoC. It has a significant impact on the overall system performance. The security services integration at the communication structure take advantage of its wide system visibility and critical role in enabling the system operation. It is able to: 1) monitor data transfer; 2) detect attacks; 3) block attacks; and 4) supply information for trigger suitable recovery mechanisms. This work proposes the implementation of the QoSS (Quality-of-Security-Service) concept at the NoC-based communication structure design. QoSS is a novel concept for data protection that introduces security as a dimension of QoS. In contrast with previous works, the different security levels deployment allow a best trade-of the system security and performance requirements. The QoSS integration is carried out trough a 5 step methodology: definition, description, implementation, evaluation and optimization. As a result a set of NoCs-QoSS that satisfies the security and performance requirements are obtained. We use the framework APOLLO that integrates a set of tools, allowing the fast exploration of the huge NoC design space. In this work we present 2 study cases that uses our methodology in order to design a NoC-QoSS that supports static and a dynamic security policies and also satisfies the security and performance requirements. Two security services: Access Control and authentication are implemented at the NoC interface and at the NoC router. The final configurations are evaluated under different traffic and attack conditions. We show that the security implementation at the router is latency and power consumption efficient that the implementation at the network interface under all the traffic conditions. However, the security implementation at the network interface allows the integration of the security characteristics in a simpler way.
|
Page generated in 0.0482 seconds