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Synthesis and Optimization of Digital Circuits

This document provides an overview of digital circuit design techniques including synthesis and optimization. It discusses high-level synthesis which transforms an abstract behavioral model into a register-transfer level model consisting of functional units. Temporal scheduling determines the timing of operations and spatial binding determines the interconnections and control logic. The goal is to explore the design space to implement the circuit functionality while minimizing area, delay and other costs.

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Srikanth Prasad
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
113 views

Synthesis and Optimization of Digital Circuits

This document provides an overview of digital circuit design techniques including synthesis and optimization. It discusses high-level synthesis which transforms an abstract behavioral model into a register-transfer level model consisting of functional units. Temporal scheduling determines the timing of operations and spatial binding determines the interconnections and control logic. The goal is to explore the design space to implement the circuit functionality while minimizing area, delay and other costs.

Uploaded by

Srikanth Prasad
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CEG790

Synthesis and Optimization


of
Digital Circuits

Dr. Travis Doom


Wright State University
Computer Science and Engineering
CEG790

Outline
■ Introduction
– Microelectronics
– Micro “economics”
– What is “design”?
■ Techniques for Digital Synthesis
– Architectural-Level Synthesis
– Logic-Level Synthesis
– Geometric Synthesis
■ Techniques for Formal Verification
– Automated Theorem-Provers
– Graph-based Algorithms
■ Reengineering
CEG790

Overview: Microelectronics
■ What is a microelectronic component?
– Devices which exploit the properties of semiconductor materials
– Constructed by patterning a substrate and locally modifying its
properties to shape “wires” and logical “devices”
– Complex functions are “integrated” into one physical package
– Fabrication is very complex
■ Microelectronic components enable “smart” systems
– Prevalent in modern systems
– Failures are not taken well - most applications are “critical”
CEG790

Overview: “Micro” Economics


■ IC technology has progressed tremendously over 40 yrs.
– Moore’s Law [SSI - ‘60, MSI - ‘70, VLSI - ‘90, ?? - ‘00]
■ Costs have increased tremendously as well
– Larger capital investment due to cost of refining precision
– Larger scale increases effort to achieve zero-defect design
● ICs are nearly impossible to repair
● The design must be correct (and manufacturing defects limited)
– Design and manufacturing costs must be recovered via sales
● Few designs do enjoy a high volume of sales or long life
● Many systems require specialized devices (ASICs) - few hold a
significant market share individually
● Improvement of technology causes immediate obsolescence
CEG790

Overview: “Micro” Economics


■ How can costs be reduced and net profit increased?
– Minimize Design (and test) time
● Reduces both time-to-market and designers’ salaries
– Increase quality of design to increase fabrication yield and provide
competitive performance
■ Design automation techniques provide an effective means
for designing economically viable products
– Carrying out a full design w/o errors is increasingly difficult w/o
systematic techniques to handle data
– CAD techniques tend to focus on Digital Synchronous circuits as
they represent the vast majority of circuits in the market
CEG790

Overview: What is “Design”?


■ General model for (Re-)Engineering (Byrne, 1992)
Alteration

Reverse Con- re-think Con- Forward


Engineering ceptual ceptual Engineering
Abstraction Refinement
re-specify
Requirements Requirements

re-design
Design Design

re-build
Implementation Implementation

Existing System Target System


CEG790

Automated Synthesis
■ Design Process
Behavioral Level ~ Requirements Spec.

high-level synthesis

Register Transfer Level

logic synthesis

Gate Level

geometrical synthesis

Physical Design ~ Implementation Spec.


CEG790

Automated Synthesis
■ Design Process ...
Behavioral Level
PC = PC + 1;
FETCH(PC);
high-level synthesis DECODE(INST);
...
Register Transfer Level

logic synthesis

MULT
Gate Level

geometrical synthesis ADD


CONTROL
Physical Design
RAM
CEG790

High-level Synthesis
■ High-level (Architectural-level) synthesis deals with the
transformation of an abstract model of behavior into a
model consisting of standard functional units
– Goal: to construct the macroscopic structure of a circuit
– Input: an abstract model of behavior
● Common Abstract Models: HDLs, State diagrams, ASM charts,
Sequencing graphs or Control/Data-flow graphs.
– Output: a structural view of the circuit, in particular of its datapath,
and a logic-level specification of its control unit
● often referred to as the register-transfer level or macro-module model
CEG790

High-level Synthesis
Control Signals
Control Status Signals
Control Unit Datapath
Inputs
Data
Outputs
Control Data
Outputs Inputs
– The data path is an interconnection of resources whose execution
and I/O is determined by the control unit according to a schedule
● functional resources:
– Primitive resources: “stock” functions
– Application-specific resources: requires model
● memory resources: registers or memory arrays to store data
● interface resources: steering logic circuits (e.g., muxes and buses)
that send data to the appropriate destination at the appropriate time
CEG790

High-level Synthesis
■ Measuring cost
– Evaluation Metrics: area, cycle-time (clock period), latency, and
throughput (pipelines)
– The objectives form a n-dimensional design space
● Architectural exploration is the traversal of the design space to
provide a spectrum of solutions for the designers selection
● Generally only the resources are considered (resource dominant)
■ The fundamental architectural synthesis problem
– Explore the design space to minimize “cost” given:
● A circuit model (behavioral)
● A set of constraints (on cost)
● A set of functional resources (characterized for area, delay, etc.)
CEG790

Temporal Scheduling
■ Automated approaches to the fundamental problem consist
of two related constrained optimization problems:
Temporal Scheduling and Spatial Binding

■ Temporal Scheduling
– Each architectural-level operation is reduced to resource operations
and the time interval for the operation execution determined
● A graph of resources must be created such that one path from start to
end exists to perform each operation (in parallel)
● The length of the path represents the operation latency
● Constraints include maximum latency, bounds on the resource usage
per type, etc.
CEG790

Scheduled Sequencing Graph


■ BDDs
T0 NOP
Constraints:
Maximum Latency: 5
T1 * + *: 3 max
+: 3 max
T2 * > + + >: 3 max

T3 * > +
T4 * > *
T5 *
NOP
CEG790

Spatial Binding
■ Spatial Binding
– Determining the detailed interconnections of the data path and the
logic-level specifications of the control unit
● The scheduled sequencing graph represents all necessary operations
● Each resource may cover several operations (for example, an ALU
covers addition, subtraction, comparison, etc.)
● A simple case is dedicated resource binding - each operation is bound
to one resource
● In general, we wish to share a resources - we don’t need to replicate
beyond the maximum number of resources at any given temporal
depth
● In essence, this becomes a set-covering problem (NPC)
■ Once a set of resources is identified, area and performance
estimations can be calculated from model data
CEG790

Scheduled Sequencing Graph w/Resource Binding

■ BDDs
T0 NOP

T1 * +

T2 * > + +
T3 * > +
T4 * > *
T5 *
NOP
CEG790

Automated Synthesis
■ Design Process MULT
Behavioral Level

high-level synthesis ADD


CONTROL
Register Transfer Level
RAM

logic synthesis

Gate Level

geometrical synthesis D D
+
Physical Design
CEG790

Logic-level Synthesis
■ Logic-level synthesis deals with the transformation of an
macroscopic model to an interconnection of logic
primitives
– These primitives determine the microscopic (i.e., gate-level)
structure of the circuit
■ A basic approach is to replace “stock” modules with pre-
optimized “stock” logic-level representations
– Local optimizations of do not necessarily create an optimal result
– Cost is increased (area, latency, power) / decreased (design time)
■ Alternatively, the modules are partitioned into manageable
designs (generally straightforward for the data path)
– Several different types of finite-state machine decompositions exist
CEG790

Logic-level Synthesis Tasks


■ Optimize finite-state machines by state minimization
– Stated as a bi-partite covering problem
■ Select a state encoding (for control unit)
– Heuristics include one-hot, almost one-hot, minimal-bit change,
prioritized-adjacency, etc.
■ Minimize the related combinational component
– Two-level (SOP) minimization (Quine-McCluksey, Rudell-
Sangiovanni, and McGeer algorithms)
– Multi-level minimization (Decomposition is non-trivial)
■ Cell-library binding
– Implement minimized combinational functions as an
interconnection of devices that are available in a given technology
library (a bound network)
CEG790

Automated Synthesis
Behavioral Level

high-level synthesis D D
+
Register Transfer Level

logic synthesis

Gate Level

geometrical synthesis

Physical Design
CEG790

Geometrical-level Synthesis
■ Geometrical-level synthesis (physical design) consists of
creating a physical view at the geometric level
– It entails the specification of all geometric patterns defining the
physical layout of the chip, as well as their position
CEG790

Validation and Verification


■ Design Process
Behavioral Level ...
PC = PC + 1; D D
FETCH(PC);
high-level synthesis DECODE(INST); +
...
Register Transfer Level

logic synthesis
?
Gate Level

geometrical synthesis MULT

ADD
Physical Design CONTROL
RAM
CEG790

Validation and Verification


■ Design Process
Behavioral Level compilation

high-level synthesis V
e
compilation r
Register Transfer Level
simulation i
f
i
logic synthesis c
a
compilation t
Gate Level
simulation i
o
n
geometrical synthesis

Physical Design simulation


CEG790

Validation and Verification


■ Circuit validation consists of acquiring reasonable
certainty that a circuit will function correctly
– Assume no manufacturing fault is present
– Can be performed via simulation or via verification
■ Simulation (Traditional Validation)
– Traditional verification consists of analyzing circuit variables (at
different levels) over an interval of time
● Unless exhaustive, simulation does not provide full coverage
■ Formal Verification (Design Verification)
– Verification methods mathematically prove or disprove the
consistency between two models, or a model and some set of
circuit model properties
● Requires a suitable representation system
● Proofs must be mechanizable
CEG790

Formal Verification
■ Property Testing (Testing via partial specification)
– Safety properties: verify “bad things will never occur”
● ex: for every path in the future, at every node on the path, if the
Request signal is low, it remain lows until Acknowledge goes low
– Liveness properties: verify “good things will occur”
● ex: for every path in the future, if there has been a Request signal,
then eventually there will be an Acknowledge signal in response to
the request on at least one node on the path
■ Popular FV approaches include:
– Theorem Proving
– Symbolic Model Checking
– Recursive Learning
– many graph-based approaches (BDDs, etc.)
CEG790

Automated Theorem-Provers
■ Automated Theorem-Proving techniques require:
– A representation of the model and/or properties as a series of
formulas (axioms) in a High-Order Language
– A finite collection of rules of inference
■ By means of a rule of inference a new formula can be
derived from a given finite set of formulas
– A formal proof is a finite sequence of formulas, each member of
which is either an axiom or the outcome of apply a rule of
inference to previous members of the sequence
– The last formal proof is the theorem
■ Allows exhaustive (heuristic directed) search for proof
– Theorem-provers presently require extensive user intervention
CEG790

Equivalence Checking
■ Equivalence checking (complete functional testing)
– The function of an model is equivalent to the function of another if
input, state, and output correspondences exist under which the
functions are equivalent
– Many techniques require factorial exploration of the input and state
correspondence search space (in the worst-case)
– FV equivalence checking of designs is known to be intractable
● co-NP complete
● heuristic techniques to achieve efficient performance
CEG790

Representations of External Function


X1BDDs

X1 X2 X3 F
F F
1 d d 0
X2 M2 0 1 1 0
M1 M4 0 1 0 1
M3
0 0 1 1
X3 0 0 0 0
Schematic of simplecircuit
F ↔ ¬X1 ∧ ((¬X2 ∧ X3) ∨ (X2 ∧ ¬X3))

ARCHITECTURE behavioral OF simplecircuit IS


BEGIN
F <= (not X1) and ((not X2) and X3) or (X2 and (not X3))) after 10 ns;
END behavioral
CEG790

BDD Representation
BDDs
■ BDD for F 0 X1 X1 X2 X3 F
X2 1 1 d d 0
0 1 0 1 1 0
0 1 0 1
0 0 1 1
X3 0 0
X3 0 0 0 0
1 1

F ↔ ¬X1 ∧ ((¬X2 ∧ X3) ∨ (X2 ∧ ¬X3))


1 0

ARCHITECTURE behavioral OF simplecircuit IS


BEGIN
F <= (not X1) and ((not X2) and X3) or (X2 and (not X3))) after 10 ns;
END behavioral
CEG790

BDD Representation
X1BDDs
■ X1 X2 X3 M1 M2 M3 M4 F
F F 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0
X2 M2 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
M1 M4 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
M3
X3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1
Schematic of simplecircuit 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
ARCHITECTURE structural OF simplecircuit IS
SIGNAL M1, M2, M3, M4: bit ;
BEGIN
gate0: nor2 PORT MAP ( O => M1, a=> X2, b => X3 );
gate1: nor2 PORT MAP ( O => M2, a=> X2, b => M1 );
gate2: nor2 PORT MAP ( O => M3, a=> M1, b => X3 );
gate3: nor2 PORT MAP ( O => M4, a=> M1, b => M3 );
gate4: nor2 PORT MAP ( O => F, a=> X1, b => M4 );
output: probe PORTMAP ( F );
END structural
CEG790

BDD Representation
X1BDDs
■ X1 X2 X3 M1 M2 M3 M4 F
F F 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0
X2 M2 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
M1 M4 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
M3
X3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1
Schematic of simplecircuit 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
X1 0

1
X2 X3 M1 BDD
BDD representing the
1
X2 0
characteristic function of
1 d 0 1
0 1 0 1
NOR gate M1:
M1 1 1 M1 (M1 ↔ ¬(X2 ∧ X3) )
0 0 1 1
0 0 otherwise 0

1 0
CEG790

BDD Representation
■ XBDDs
1
X1 X2 X3 M1 M2 M3 M4 F
1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0
X2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0
1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
X3 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0
M1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1
0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1
M2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0
(M1 ↔ ¬(X2 ∧ X3) ) ∧
M3 (M2 ↔ ¬(X2 ∧ M1) ) ∧
(M3 ↔ ¬(X3 ∧ M1) ) ∧
M4 (M4 ↔ ¬(M2 ∧ M3) ) ∧
(F ↔ ¬(X1 ∧ M4) )
F
BDD representing structural relationships
1 All edges not shown lead to the 0-terminal
CEG790

Binary Decision Diagrams


■ BDDs have been shown to be efficient under a mild
assumption on the order of the variables
■ OBDDS have more practical applications than most
graphical representations:
– OBDDs can be transformed into canonical forms to uniquely
characterize their function
– Operations on OBDDs can be done in O(|G|) time
■ OBDDs are the basis for many new FV approaches
– Unfortunately, the size of the BDD is based upon the variable
ordering and can have exponential size in the worst case
– FV problems are far from solved!
CEG790

Modern Design Approaches


■ The most common contemporary design approaches are:
– Custom Approach: Designed primarily by hand (so to speak)
● Full Custom Vs. Standard Cell - Using standard cell designs (same
height, variable width) and routing channels simplifies design process
● Highest Density, Highest Manufacturing Cost
– Semi-custom Approach: Design process focuses on CAD tools
● Gate array: a partially prefabricated IC that incorporates a large
number of identical devices (ex: 3-input NAND or NOR gates) that
are laid out in a regular two-dimensional array
● Technology mapping: The process of designing a logic function as a
network of the available devices (a.k.a cell-library binding)
● Lower Density (110-125% devices of equivalent custom design)
● Inexpensive: Requires only metal deposition (to define device
interconnections), economies of scale
CEG790

Modern Design Approaches


■ The most common contemporary design approaches are:
– PLD Approach: Often dependent on CAD tools
● ex: Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs)
● VLSI modules that can be programmed to implement a digital system
consisting of tens of thousands of gates.
● LSI PLDs implement two-level combinational and sequential
networks
● FPGAs allow the realization of “reprogrammable” multilevel
networks and complex systems on a single chip
● Low cost
● May produce slower network
● May require a larger silicon area
CEG790

Reengineering
■ Design Process
Behavioral Level
D D
high-level synthesis
? +

Register Transfer Level

logic synthesis

Gate Level

geometrical synthesis
?
Physical Design
CEG790

CAD tools for Design Recovery


■ REW’98 REW’98 Behavioral Level
Sample Preparation

Etching Model Generation


Domain Specific Info.

Image Acquisition Register Transfer Level

Syntactic Pattern Matching


SEM Semantic Pattern Matching
Staging
Image Processing Gate-level Netlist
BMP to GDL
Syntactic Pattern Matching

Geometric Description DRC Transistor Netlist

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