Publication | Open Access
A complexity-effective architecture for accelerating full-system multiprocessor simulations using FPGAs
55
Citations
17
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
Heterogeneous ComputingEngineeringEmulation TechniqueHardware AlgorithmComputer ArchitectureComputational ComplexityProtoflex Simulation ArchitectureFunctional Full-system SimulatorsProcessor ArchitectureHardware ArchitectureHigh-performance ArchitecturePrior FpgaModeling And SimulationParallel ComputingComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceFpga DesignComplexity-effective ArchitectureHardware EmulationHardware AccelerationProgram AnalysisParallel Programming
Functional full-system simulators are powerful and versatile research tools for accelerating architectural exploration and advanced software development. Their main shortcoming is limited throughput when simulating systems with hundreds of processors or more. To overcome this bottleneck, we propose the PROTOFLEX simulation architecture, which uses FPGAs to accelerate simulation. Prior FPGA approaches that prototype a complete system in hardware are either too complex when scaling to large-scale configurations or require significant effort to provide full-system support. In contrast, PROTOFLEX reduces complexity by virtualizing the execution of many logical processors onto a consolidated set of multiple-context execution engines on the FPGA. Through virtualization, the number of engines can be judiciously scaled, as needed, to deliver on necessary simulation performance. To achieve low-complexity full-system support, a hybrid simulation technique called transplanting allows implementing in the FPGA only the frequently encountered behaviors, while a software simulator preserves the abstraction of a complete system
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