Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Open Discussion of Design Flow Today’s task: Design an ASIC that will drive a TV cell phone Exercise objective: Importance of codesign.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Open Discussion of Design Flow Today’s task: Design an ASIC that will drive a TV cell phone Exercise objective: Importance of codesign."— Presentation transcript:

1 Open Discussion of Design Flow Today’s task: Design an ASIC that will drive a TV cell phone Exercise objective: Importance of codesign

2 Layout Styles Full-custom Gate-array Standard-cell Macro-cell FPGA (Field Programmable Gate-Array)

3 Full-custom Complete control over transistor and interconnect dimensions (within design rule constraints) Produces Optimized Design (density, power, performance) Circuit Designers create application-specific building blocks –Technology Provider (foundry) provide SPICE/HSPICE transistor models, parasitic extraction tools –Models are used to drive transistor sizing/layout constraints Layout technician creates graphics from design schematic Top level down/Bottom level up Continual verification of design as it becomes more defined

4 Design Rule Constraints Minimum Spacing –Between metal lines (varies per layer) –Line width –Transistor channel lengths –Active area Via stacks (Check from work)

5 Full-custom Disadvantages Most time-consuming Most error-prone Highest NRE (non-recurring expense) –Design time –Layout time –Mask costs Longest time to manufacture

6 Gate-array Layout Transistors pre-placed, fixed in size Personalized by metal routing Fastest to manufacture Lowest mask cost Lends itself to automated placement and wiring

7 Gate Array Vdd Gnd Horizontal Routing Channel Vertical Routing Channel Sea of Gates: Routing Channels removed, route at higher metal layers

8 Gate Array Example Vdd Gnd A A B B Vdd Schematic A A B B Out

9 Gate-array Disadvantages Non-optimized spacing Limited transistor sizing options –Density –Performance –Power Wiring blockages/inefficiencies Excess circuitry

10 Standard Cell Layout Design partitioned into cells of standard height Power and Ground (Power grid) wiring preset Technology provider supplies libraries of pre-designed cell elements for usage (utilize varying numbers of cells) –Primitives (NAND, NOR, etc.) –Storage Elements (DFF) Libraries can be tailored to specific applications (e.g., low power vs. high performance) Requires full manufacturing sequence Typically automated place and wiring

11 Standard Cell Layout Routing Channel Feed-through cell Note uniform height

12 Our Cell Library Need specifics on library students will be using

13 Standard Cell Disadvantages Cell height restrictions limits cell library contents Full set of masks Longer manufacturing times

14 Macro-cell Layout Library elements provided by technology supplier (e.g., foundry) Elements can be of varying heights and widths Richer variety of library elements (IP friendly)

15 Macro-cell Disadvantages Similar to Standard-cell in length of manufacturing times, mask costs Placement and wiring more complex Pre-layout of power grid more difficult, may not be possible

16 FPGA Field Programmable Gate Array Array of logic blocks (Configurable Logic Blocks CLB) Switchable interconnect resources –Wire segments of varying lengths –Programmable switches that connect logic resources to wire segments Final user sets switches (CLB and interconnect) Immediate Use (“zero” fab time) Minimal expense Great for hardware prototyping

17 FPGA: Virtex-II Architecture Virtex™-II architecture’s core voltage operates at 1.5V I/O Blocks (IOBs) Configurable Logic Blocks (CLBs) Configurable Logic Blocks (CLBs) Clock Management (DCMs, BUFGMUXes) Block SelectRAM™ resource Block SelectRAM™ resource Dedicated multipliers Programmable interconnect © 2005 Xilinx, Inc. All Rights Reserved For Academic Use Only

18 Slices and CLBs Each Virtex  -II CLB contains four slices –Local routing provides feedback between slices in the same CLB, and it provides routing to neighboring CLBs –A switch matrix provides access to general routing resources CIN Switch Matrix BUFT COUT Slice S0 Slice S1 Local Routing Slice S2 Slice S3 CIN SHIFT © 2005 Xilinx, Inc. All Rights Reserved For Academic Use Only

19 Slice 0 LUT Carry LUT Carry DQ CE PRE CLR D Q CE PRE CLR Simplified Slice Structure Each slice has four outputs –Two registered outputs, two non-registered outputs –Two BUFTs associated with each CLB, accessible by all 16 CLB outputs Carry logic runs vertically, up only –Two independent carry chains per CLB © 2005 Xilinx, Inc. All Rights Reserved For Academic Use Only

20 FPGA Disadvantages Least efficient use of silicon/wiring resources Limited size options Limited performance Not good for high volume applications If used for prototyping, still may have significant changes when migrate to higher performance design and package solution


Download ppt "Open Discussion of Design Flow Today’s task: Design an ASIC that will drive a TV cell phone Exercise objective: Importance of codesign."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google