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GECCO
2004
Springer

A Multi-objective Approach to Configuring Embedded System Architectures

13 years 10 months ago
A Multi-objective Approach to Configuring Embedded System Architectures
Portable embedded systems are being driven by consumer demands to be thermally efficient, perform faster, and have longer battery life. To design such a system, various hardware units (e.g., level one (L1) and level two (L2) caches, functional units, registers) are selected based on a set of specifications for a particular application. Currently, chip architects are using software tools to manually explore different configurations, so that tradeoffs for power consumption, performance, and chip size may be understood. The primary contribution of this paper is the development of a novel power-performance design tool based around a core GA search and optimization technique. The tool targets the implementation of portable embedded systems. 1 Summary This paper presents a framework for an evolutionary computational approach to configuring an “ideal” embedded processor based on power consumption and performance. In addition, a database of simulation results that gives a more comprehensiv...
James Northern III, Michael A. Shanblatt
Added 01 Jul 2010
Updated 01 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where GECCO
Authors James Northern III, Michael A. Shanblatt
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