System-level analysis of MPSoCs with a hardware scheduler
Research output: Contribution to book/Conference proceedings/Anthology/Report › Chapter in book/Anthology/Report › Contributed › peer-review
Contributors
Abstract
Efficient runtime resource management in heterogeneous Multi-Processor Systems-on-Chip (MPSoCs) for achieving high performance and energy efficiency is one key challenge for system designers. In the past years, several IP blocks have been proposed that implement system-wide runtime task and resource management. As the processor count continues to increase, it is important to analyze the scalability of runtime managers at the system-level for different communication architectures. In this chapter, the authors analyze the scalability of an Application-Specific Instruction-Set Processor (ASIP) for runtime management called OSIP on two platform paradigms: shared and distributed memory. For the former, a generic bus is used as interconnect. For distributed memory, a Network-on-Chip (NoC) is used. The effects of OSIP and the communication architecture are jointly investigated from the system point of view, based on a broad case study with real applications (an H.264 video decoder and a digital receiver for wireless communications) and a synthetic benchmark application.
Details
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Leadership and Personnel Management |
Publisher | IGI Global |
Pages | 777-812 |
Number of pages | 36 |
Volume | 2 |
ISBN (electronic) | 9781466696259 |
ISBN (print) | 1466696249, 9781466696242 |
Publication status | Published - 17 Feb 2016 |
Peer-reviewed | Yes |
External IDs
ORCID | /0000-0002-5007-445X/work/141545574 |
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