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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Compiler Directed Codesign for FPGA-based Embedded Systems

Hauff, Martin Anthony, marty@extendabilities.com.au January 2008 (has links)
As embedded systems designers increasingly turn to programmable logic technologies in place of off-the-shelf microprocessors, there is a growing interest in the development of optimised custom processing cores that can be designed on a per-application basis. FPGAs blur the traditional distinction between hardware and software and offer the promise of application specific hardware acceleration. But realizing this in a general sense requires a significant departure from traditional embedded systems development flows. Whereas off-the-shelf processors have a fixed architecture, the same cannot be said of purpose-built FPGA-based processors. With this freedom comes the challenge of empirically determining the optimal boundary point between hardware and software. The fluidity of the hardware/software partition also poses an interesting challenge for compiler developers. This thesis presents a tool and methodology that addresses these codesign challenges in a new way. Described as 'compiler-directed codesign', it makes use of a suitably modified compiler to help direct the development of a custom processor core on a per-application basis. By exposing the compiler's internal representation of a compiled target program, visibility into those instructions, and hardware resources, that are most sought after by the compiler can be gained. This information is then used to inform further processor development and to determine the optimal partition between hardware and software. At each design iteration, the machine model is updated to reflect the available hardware resources, the compiler is rebuilt, and the target application is compiled once again. By including the compiler 'in-the-loop' of custom processor design, developers can accurately quantify the impact on performance caused by the addition or removal of specific hardware resources and iteratively converge on an optimal solution. Compiler Directed Codesign has advantages over existing codesign methodologies because it offers both a concrete point from which to begin the partitioning process as well as providing quantifiable and rapid feedback of the merits of different partitioning choices. When applied to an Adaptive PCM Encoder/Decoder case study, the Compiler Directed Codesign technique yielded a custom processor core that was between 36% and 73% smaller, consumed between 11% to 19% less memory, and performed up to 10X faster than comparable general-purpose FPGA-based processor cores. The conclusion of this work is that a suitably modified compiler can serve a valuable role in directing hardware/software partitioning on a per-application basis.
12

Design and Implementation of an FPGA-Based Scalable Pipelined Associative SIMD Processor Array with Specialized Variations for Sequence Comparison and MSIMD Operation

Wang, Hong 21 November 2006 (has links)
No description available.
13

A Soft-core processor architecture optimised for radar signal processing applications

Broich, René January 2013 (has links)
Current radar signal processor architectures lack either performance or flexibility in terms of ease of modification and large design time overheads. Combinations of processors and FPGAs are typically hard-wired together into a precisely timed and pipelined solution to achieve a desired level of functionality and performance. Such a fixed processing solution is clearly not feasible for new algorithm evaluation or quick changes during field tests. A more flexible solution based on a high-performance soft-core processing architecture is proposed. To develop such a processing architecture, data and signal-flow characteristics of common radar signal processing algorithms are analysed. Each algorithm is broken down into signal processing and mathematical operations. The computational requirements are then evaluated using an abstract model of computation to determine the relative importance of each mathematical operation. Critical portions of the radar applications are identified for architecture selection and optimisation purposes. Built around these dominant operations, a soft-core architecture model that is better matched to the core computational requirements of a radar signal processor is proposed. The processor model is iteratively refined based on the previous synthesis as well as code profiling results. To automate this iterative process, a software development environment was designed. The software development environment enables rapid architectural design space exploration through the automatic generation of development tools (assembler, linker, code editor, cycle accurate emulator / simulator, programmer, and debugger) as well as platform independent VHDL code from an architecture description file. Together with the board specific HDL-based HAL files, the design files are synthesised using the vendor specific FPGA tools and practically verified on a custom high performance development board. Timing results, functional accuracy, resource usage, profiling and performance data are analysed and fed back into the architecture description file for further refinement. The results from this iterative design process yielded a unique transport-based pipelined architecture. The proposed architecture achieves high data throughput while providing the flexibility that a software-programmable device offers. The end user can thus write custom radar algorithms in software rather than going through a long and complex HDL-based design. The simplicity of this architecture enables high clock frequencies, deterministic response times, and makes it easy to understand. Furthermore, the architecture is scalable in performance and functionality for a variety of different streaming and burst-processing related applications. A comparison to the Texas Instruments C66x DSP core showed a decrease in clock cycles by a factor between 10.8 and 20.9 for the identical radar application on the proposed architecture over a range of typical operating parameters. Even with the limited clock speeds achievable on the FPGA technology, the proposed architecture exceeds the performance of the commercial high-end DSP processor. Further research is required on ASIC, SIMD and multi-core implementations as well as compiler technology for the proposed architecture. A custom ASIC implementation is expected to further improve the processing performance by factors between 10 and 27. / Dissertation (MEng)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering / unrestricted
14

Microcontrôleur à flux chiffré d'instructions et de données / Design and implementation of a microprocessor working with encrypted instructions and data

Hiscock, Thomas 07 December 2017 (has links)
Un nombre important et en constante augmentation de systèmes numériques nous entoure. Tablettes, smartphones et objets connectés ne sont que quelques exemples apparents de ces technologies omniprésentes, dont la majeure partie est enfouie, invisible à l'utilisateur. Les microprocesseurs, au cœur de ces systèmes, sont soumis à de fortes contraintes en ressources, sûreté de fonctionnement et se doivent, plus que jamais, de proposer une sécurité renforcée. La tâche est d'autant plus complexe qu'un tel système, par sa proximité avec l'utilisateur, offre une large surface d'attaque.Cette thèse, se concentre sur une propriété essentielle attendue pour un tel système, la confidentialité, le maintien du secret du programme et des données qu'il manipule. En effet, l'analyse du programme, des instructions qui le compose, est une étape essentielle dans la conception d'une attaque. D'autre part, un programme est amené à manipuler des données sensibles (clés cryptographiques, mots de passes, ...), qui doivent rester secrètes pour ne pas compromettre la sécurité du système.Cette thèse, se concentre sur une propriété essentielle attendue pour un tel système, la confidentialité, le maintien du secret du programme et des données qu'il manipule. Une première contribution de ces travaux est une méthode de chiffrement d'un code, basée sur le graphe de flot de contrôle, rendant possible l'utilisation d'algorithmes de chiffrement par flots, légers et efficaces. Protéger les accès mémoires aux données d'un programme s'avère plus complexe. Dans cette optique, nous proposons l'utilisation d'un chiffrement homomorphe pour chiffrer les données stockées en mémoire et les maintenir sous forme chiffrée lors de l'exécution des instructions. Enfin, nous présenterons l'intégration de ces propositions dans une architecture de processeur et les résultats d'évaluation sur logique programmable (FPGA) avec plusieurs programmes d'exemples. / Embedded processors are today ubiquitous, dozen of them compose and orchestrate every technology surrounding us, from tablets to smartphones and a large amount of invisible ones. At the core of these systems, processors gather data, process them and interact with the outside world. As such, they are excepted to meet very strict safety and security requirements. From a security perspective, the task is even more difficult considering the user has a physical access to the device, allowing a wide range of specifically tailored attacks.Confidentiality, in terms of both software code and data is one of the fundamental properties expected for such systems. The first contribution of this work is a software encryption method based on the control flow graph of the program. This enables the use of stream ciphers to provide lightweight and efficient encryption, suitable for constrained processors. The second contribution is a data encryption mechanism based on homomorphic encryption. With this scheme, sensible data remain encrypted not only in memory, but also during computations. Then, the integration and evaluation of these solutions on Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) with some example programs will be discussed.
15

Designing Future Low-Power and Secure Processors with Non-Volatile Memory

Pan, Xiang 07 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.
16

Implementace obecného assembleru / Implementation of General Assembler

Husár, Adam January 2007 (has links)
This thesis describes the design of the universal assembler that represents a part of the Lissom project. You will be provided with the description of the assembler architectures and their usual tasks. Special attention is paid to GNU assembler. Designed assembler consists of the fixed and the generated part. The generated part is created automatically from the description of instruction set, that is defined using architecture and instructions set description language ISAC. Using this approach, it is possible to change assembler target architecture automatically. The second part of thesis describes the Parserlib2 library implementation that is a part of the Lissom project and provides the information about the target instruction set for an assembler generator.

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