Accelerate partial reconfiguration with a 100% hardware solution
S. Lamonnier, M. Thoris, M. Ambielle, Sagem DS (Safran Group)
EETimes (5/26/2012 12:39 PM EDT)
In many modern applications such as video processing, minimizing FPGA reconfiguration time is critical in order to avoid losing too many images. Partial reconfiguration is a technique that allows users to reconfigure a small part of the FPGA without impacting logical elements around it. For the human eye to see an image without flicker, the reconfiguration time must be less than 40 milliseconds. That’s very little time to reconfigure an entire device, save for the smallest FPGAs; and in certain specific applications, this reconfiguration time must be even less. Hence the appeal of partial reconfiguration: Because a partial bitstream is smaller than a full one, it takes less time to reconfigure.
At Sagem DS, we have devised a technique that allows FPGA designers to accomplish partial reconfiguration very fast. The ML507 [1] was the Xilinx reference board we used for testing and validating the solution and to measure timing. Typically, the components on this board are a Virtex-5 FPGA (XC5VFX70T-FFG1136), a CPLD (used as a routing component) and two XCF32P memories (Xilinx Platform Flash).
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- NPU IP Core for Mobile
- NPU IP Core for Edge
- Specialized Video Processing NPU IP
- HYPERBUS™ Memory Controller
- AV1 Video Encoder IP
Related White Papers
- PUF is a Hardware Solution for the Sunburst Hack
- Run by Chips, Secured with Chips - Hardware Security with NeoPUF solutions
- FPGA partial reconfiguration mitigates variability
- PRODUCT HOW-TO: Use ARM DBX hardware extensions to accelerate Java in space-constrained embedded apps
Latest White Papers
- Ramping Up Open-Source RISC-V Cores: Assessing the Energy Efficiency of Superscalar, Out-of-Order Execution
- Transition Fixes in 3nm Multi-Voltage SoC Design
- CXL Topology-Aware and Expander-Driven Prefetching: Unlocking SSD Performance
- Breaking the Memory Bandwidth Boundary. GDDR7 IP Design Challenges & Solutions
- Automating NoC Design to Tackle Rising SoC Complexity