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ICFPT 05 » Keynotes
IEEE 2005 Conference on
Field-Programmable Technology (FPT)
http://www.icfpt.org/
Venue: Kent Ridge Guild House,
National University of
Singapore
Singapore
December 11-14, 2005
Co-sponsorship
by
IEEE Circuit and Systems Society
IEEE Singapore Section
School of Computing,
National University of Singapore
Technical Co-sponsorship
by
Electron Devices Society,
IEEE
Platform-Based Synthesis for
Field-Programmable SOCs
Speaker:
Jason Cong, UCLA

Latest FPGAs offer a rich
platform as field-programmable system-on-chips (FP-SOCs), including a
variety of field-programmable components for system-level implementation,
including hard and soft processors, , a large amount of field-programmable
logic, and various kinds of embedded memories, IP blocks, and programmable
I/Os. Such FP-SOCs offer great potential for rapid system prototyping and
implementation, but also presents significant challenge to the synthesis
capability of existing EDA tools in terms of making efficient use of
system-level components and architectures in the FP-SOCs. In this talk, I
shall present the platform-based synthesis system, named xPilot, being
developed at UCLA. The first objective of xPilot is to provide novel
behavioral synthesis capability for generating efficient RTL code from C or
System-C description automatically for a given FPGA platform for logic,
interconnects, performance, and power optimization. The second objective of
xPilot is to provide platform-based system-level synthesis capability for
automatic generation of software for embedded processors, RTL description
for programmable logic, and associated interface logic. In particular,
xPilot can synthesize application-specific instruction-set processors
through automatic identification and implementation of extensible
instructions of field-programmable processors. Preliminary experiments of
xPilot on two FP-SOC platforms demonstrate the efficacy of our approach on a
number of applications and its value in exploring various kinds of design
tradeoffs for behavior-level or system-level designs.
About the Speaker
Jason Cong received his B.S.
degree in computer science from Peking University in 1985, his M.S. and Ph.
D. degrees in computer science from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign in 1987 and 1990, respectively. Currently, he is a
Professor and Chairman of the Computer Science Department of University of
California, Los Angeles, and co-director of the VLSI CAD Laboratory. His
research interests include synthesis and layout of VLSI circuits, highly
scalable VLSI design algorithms and tools, design and synthesis of
programmable circuits and systems, system-on-a-chip designs, and computer
architectures. He has published over 220 research papers and led over 30
research projects supported by DARPA, NSF, SRC, and a number of industrial
sponsors in these areas. He served on technical program committees and
executive committees of many professional conferences, such as DAC, ICCAD,
and ISCAS, including serving as the General Chair of the 1993 ACM/SIGDA
Physical Design Workshop, the Program Chair and General Chair of the 1997
and 1998 Int'l Symp. on FPGAs, respectively, the Program Co-Chair of the
1999 Int'l Symp. on Low-Power Electronics and Designs, and the Program
Co-Chair and General Co-Chair of ASPDAC'2003 and ASPDAC’2005, respectively.
He served as an Associate Editor for IEEE Trans. on VLSI Systems from 1999
to 2002, and has been an Associate Editor of ACM Trans. on Design Automation
of Electronic Systems since 1995. He served on the ACM SIGDA Advisory Board
from 1993 – 1999. He served on the Board of Governors of the IEEE Circuits
and Systems Society during 2001 - 2004. Dr. Cong received the Best Graduate
Award from the Peking University in 1985, and the Ross J. Martin Award for
Excellence in Research from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
in 1989. He received the NSF Young Investigator Award in 1993, the Northrop
Outstanding Junior Faculty Research Award from UCLA in 1993, and the ACM/SIGDA
Meritorious Service Award in 1998. He has received three best paper awards,
including the 1995 IEEE Trans. on CAD Best Paper Award, the 2005
International Symposium on Physical Design Best Paper Award, and the 2005
ACM Transaction on Design Automation of Electronic Systems Best Paper Award.
He also received the SRC Inventor Recognition Award and the SRC Technical
Excellence Award both in 2000. He was elected to an IEEE Fellow in 2000. Dr.
Cong has served or is serving on the Technical Advisory Board of a number of
EDA and silicon IP companies, including Atrenta, eASIC, FlexChip, Get2Chip,
Kilopass Technologies, Magma Design Automation, and Ultima Interconnect
Technologies. He was the founder and president of Aplus Design Technologies,
Inc., until it was acquired by Magma Design Automation in 2003. Currently,
he serves as the Chief Technologist Advisor of Magma. He is also a Guest
Professor of Peking University since 2000.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Second Keynote
Low Power and High Speed Issues in FPGA
Chips
Speaker:
Tadao Nakamura,
Tohoku University

In the era of digital
multimedia, we have a large variety of chips for functions in many
applications. Full custom chips and ASICs are popular in industry due to
very low prices for high volume production. On the other hand, FPGAs are
approaching commercial viability on larger and larger volumes, even though
they have shortcomings in speed, power and area (cost). The features of
FPGAs are in some sense outstanding in terms of rapidly building up
functional chips minimizing development time and therefore giving us a
shortcut in the development of chips. Thinking of FPGA Technology, the issue
of low power and high speed requires us to consider the whole system in
terms of both hardware and software. In particular, power consumption of
FPGAs includes a high price for gate-level reconfigurability. This talk will
discuss low power issues with FPGAs within a whole system, based on the
concept of efficiency in energy.
About the speaker
Tadao Nakamura received his PhD in Electronics using Computer Aided Design
in 1972 from Tohoku University. Dr. Nakamura is currently a Professor of the
Department of Computer and Mathematical Sciences at Tohoku University. He
was founding chair of the department in 1993. Prior to that he was a
Professor of the Department of Mechanical (Machine Intelligence and Systems)
Engineering at Tohoku University and a Visiting Lecturer in the Department
of Information Science at the University of Tokyo. From 1994-98 he was a
Visiting Professor of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University. His
recent research interests are in computer architecture, especially
pipelining based microarchitecture, and low power concepts in chips, in
general. He was elected in 2004 to receive the IEEE Computer Society Taylor
L. Booth Award. He has been Organizing Committee Chair of the COOL Chips
conference series fully sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society. Dr. Nakamura
was elected Fellow of the IEEE in 2002 for contributions to pipelined
computer architecture and computer engineering education.
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© 2005 School of Computing, National University of
Singapore
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