scholarly journals On-chip ring network designs for hard-real time systems

Author(s):  
Miloš Panić ◽  
German Rodriguez ◽  
Eduardo Quiñones ◽  
Jaume Abella ◽  
Francisco J. Cazorla
2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (supp01) ◽  
pp. 1940005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukáš Kohútka ◽  
Lukáš Nagy ◽  
Viera Stopjaková

This paper presents a novel design of a coprocessor that performs hardware-accelerated task scheduling for embedded real-time systems consisting of mixed-criticality real-time tasks. The proposed solution is based on the Robust Earliest Deadline (RED) algorithm and previously developed hardware architectures used for scheduling of real-time tasks. Thanks to the HW implementation of the scheduler in the form of a coprocessor, the scheduler operations (i.e., instructions) are always completed in two clock cycles regardless of the actual or even maximum task amount within the system. The proposed scheduler was verified using simplified version of UVM and applying billions of randomly generated instructions as inputs to the scheduler. Chip area costs are evaluated by synthesis for Intel FPGA Cyclone V and for 28-nm TSMC ASIC. Three versions of real-time task schedulers were compared: EDF-based scheduler designed for hard real-time tasks only, GED-based scheduler and the proposed RED-based scheduler, which is suitable for tasks of various criticalities. According to the synthesis results, the RED-based scheduler consumes LUTs and occupies larger chip area than the original EDF-based scheduler with equivalent parameters used. However, the RED-based scheduler handles variations of task execution times better, achieves higher CPU utilization and can be used for the scheduling of hard real-time, soft real-time and nonreal-time tasks combined in one system, which is not possible with the former algorithms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (13) ◽  
pp. 1850208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Long Cheng ◽  
Kai Huang ◽  
Gang Chen ◽  
Biao Hu ◽  
Zhuangyi Jiang ◽  
...  

Due to growing power density, on-chip temperature increases rapidly, which has hampered the reliability and performance of modern real-time systems. This paper studies how to minimize the peak temperature of real-time systems under hard real-time constraints with periodic thermal management. A closed-form representation of the peak temperature for such a periodic scheme is derived to tackle this problem. Based on this closed form and the arrival curve model, one offline approach and one online approach are proposed to minimize the peak temperature for a given event stream. The offline one does thermal optimization in design phase and introduces negligible runtime overhead. The online one computes dynamic power-control schemes which are adaptive to actual event arrivals and execution states. We conduct experiments on a real single-core processor and compare our approaches to two existing works. The temperature results measured from a physical thermal sensor demonstrate that the achieved maximal and average temperature reductions are 5[Formula: see text]K and 2.6[Formula: see text]K, respectively.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (06) ◽  
pp. 1950102
Author(s):  
Mingchuan Zhou ◽  
Long Cheng ◽  
Manuel Dell’Antonio ◽  
Xiebing Wang ◽  
Zhenshan Bing ◽  
...  

With the increasing power densities, managing the on-chip temperature has become an important design challenge, especially for hard real-time systems. This paper addresses the problem of minimizing the peak temperature under hard real-time constraints using a combination of dynamic voltage scaling and dynamic power management. We derive a closed-form formulation for the peak temperature and provide a genetic-algorithm-based approach to solve the problem. Our approach is evaluated with both simulations and real measurements with an Intel i5 processor. The evaluation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach compared to related works in the literature.


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