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Design technology for fault-free and maximally-parallel wavelength-routed optical networks-on-chip
18
Citations
12
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringProper Eda SupportComputer ArchitectureOptical Wireless CommunicationInterconnection Network ArchitectureOptical ComputingOptical NetworksSystems EngineeringOptical NetworkingFree-space Optical NetworkPhotonicsOptical InterconnectsDesign TechnologyComputer EngineeringNetwork On ChipWronoc ParametersComputer ScienceDesign ComplexityEdge ComputingOptoelectronics
The recent interest in emerging interconnect technologies is bringing the issue of a proper EDA support for them to the forefront, so to tackle the design complexity. A relevant case study is provided by wavelength-routed optical NoCs (WRONoCs), which add communication performance guarantees to the typical latency, throughput and power benefits of an optical link, thus providing an appealing technology for the photonic integration of high-end embedded systems. Typically, only abstract WRONoC models are considered to figure out architecture-level performance, and logic connectivity patterns for the quantification of the required signal strength (i.e., static power). However, this design practice overlooks the needed refinement step, where key physical parameters are assigned such as wavelengths of the optical channels, and size of the optical filters. This step is unfortunately not decoupled from the architectural evaluation, since its main constraint (i.e., avoiding routing faults) turns out to be a key limiter for both the network scale and the achievable communication parallelism. By proposing a formal methodology to select WRONoC parameters while avoding the routing fault concern, this paper aims at maximizing the levels of connectivity and/or of bit parallelism that WRONoCs can achieve, while relating their upper bounds to the uncertainty of the manufacturing process.
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