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Design Space Exploration of LDPC Decoders Using High-Level Synthesis

Authors :
Joao Andrade
Nithin George
Kimon Karras
David Novo
Frederico Pratas
Leonel Sousa
Paolo Ienne
Gabriel Falcao
Vitor Silva
Source :
IEEE Access, Vol 5, Pp 14600-14615 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
IEEE, 2017.

Abstract

Today, high-level synthesis (HLS) tools are being touted as a means to perform rapid prototyping and shortening the long development cycles needed to produce hardware designs in register transfer level (RTL). In this paper, we attempt to verify this claim by testing the productivity benefits offered by current HLS tools by using them to develop one of the most important and complex processing blocks of modern software-defined radio systems: the forward error correction unit that uses low density paritycheck (LDPC) codes. More specifically, we consider three state-of-the-art HLS tools and demonstrate how they can enable users with little hardware design expertise to quickly explore a large design space and develop complex hardware designs that achieve performances that are within the same order of magnitude of handcrafted ones in RTL. Additionally, we discuss how the underlying computation model used in these HLS tools can constrain the microarchitecture of the generated designs and, consequently, impose limits on achievable performance. Our prototype LDPC decoders developed using HLS tools obtain throughputs ranging from a few Mbits/s up to Gbits/s and latencies as low as 5 ms. Based on these results, we provide insights that will help users to select the most suitable model for designing LDPC decoder blocks using these HLS tools. From a broader perspective, these results illustrate how well today's HLS tools deliver upon their promise to lower the effort and cost of developing complex signal processing blocks, such as the LDPC block we have considered in this paper.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21693536
Volume :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
IEEE Access
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3bd292e886b94ddf839a40c52df268fa
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2017.2727221