The Gatekeeper of a Successful Design is the Interconnect
By K Charles Janac, President and CEO, Arteris IP
EETimes (August 25, 2019)
An effective interconnect makes delivering a complex SoC easier, more predictable, and less costly.
Systems-on-chips (SoCs) are increasingly becoming networks to which you attach separate blocks of intellectual property (IP). SoC IP blocks include processors, memory controllers, specialized subsystems, and I/Os — and the blocks can be segregated from the interconnect IP to partition increasingly complex SoCs. Increasingly complex SoCs are required for a near future when electronics systems are allowed to make decisions.
An interconnect handles various types of traffic inside an SoC and is a mechanism for effective IP block integration. The interconnect is the most configurable IP in the SoC — typically changing many times during a project and nearly always changing between projects. It also plays a vital role in security and functional safety because it carries most of the SoC data and contains nearly all the SoC’s long wires and system-level services, including quality of service (QoS), visibility, physical awareness, and power management. The interconnect enables cache coherency in multiprocessor SoCs, high-performance and bandwidth levels in advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) automotive chips and networking SoCs, and ultra-low power in long-running consumer devices.
To read the full article, click here
Related White Papers
- A Survey on the Design, Detection, and Prevention of Pre-Silicon Hardware Trojans
- The Future Of Chip Design
- PUF is a Hardware Solution for the Sunburst Hack
- The network-on-chip interconnect is the SoC
Latest White Papers
- e-GPU: An Open-Source and Configurable RISC-V Graphic Processing Unit for TinyAI Applications
- How to design secure SoCs, Part II: Key Management
- Seven Key Advantages of Implementing eFPGA with Soft IP vs. Hard IP
- Hardware vs. Software Implementation of Warp-Level Features in Vortex RISC-V GPU
- Data Movement Is the Energy Bottleneck of Today’s SoCs