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Key features of the design methodology enabling a multi-core SoC implementation of a first-generation CELL processor

Authors :
J. Keaty
Mydung Pham
Juergen Pille
Tuyen V. Nguyen
H V Anderson
James D. Warnock
D. Pham
S. Weitzel
Atsushi Kameyama
Charles Ray Johns
M. Bolliger
P. Harvey
Joseph Roland Verock
Sanjay Gupta
Peter Hofstee
Sang Y. Lee
J. Kahle
Stephen Douglas Posluszny
Mack W. Riley
Bob Le
Dieter Wendel
Erwin Behnen
John George Petrovick
Source :
ASP-DAC
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
IEEE, 2006.

Abstract

This paper reviews the design challenges that current and future processors must face, with stringent power limits and high frequency targets, and the design methods required to overcome the above challenges and address the continuing Giga-scale system integration trend. This paper then describes the details behind the design methodology that was used to successfully implement a first-generation CELL processor - a multi-core SoC. Key features of this methodology are broad optimization with fast rule-based analysis engines using macro-level abstraction for constraints propagation up/down the design hierarchy, coupled with accurate transistor level simulation for detailed analysis. The methodology fostered the modular design concept that is inherent to the CELL architecture, enabling a high frequency design by maximizing custom circuit content through re-use, and balanced power, frequency, and die size targets through global convergence capabilities. The design has roughly 241 million transistors implemented in 90 nm SOI technology with 8 levels of copper interconnects and one local interconnect layer. The chip has been tested at various temperatures, voltages, and frequencies. Correct operation has been observed in the lab on first pass silicon at frequencies well over 4GHz.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Asia and South Pacific Conference on Design Automation, 2006.
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7dc19350632601cfa314afe1d21ada78
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/aspdac.2006.1594796