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FPGA
1997
ACM

Wormhole Run-Time Reconfiguration

13 years 8 months ago
Wormhole Run-Time Reconfiguration
Configurable Computing Machines (CCMs) are an emerging class of computing platform which provide the computational performance benefits of ASICs, yet retain the flexibility and rapid reconfigurability of general purpose microprocessors. In these platforms, computational "hardware" is essentially swapped in and out of the platform as needed, much like paging in virtual memory systems. For an efficient platform, the swapping of the computational hardware (referred to as Run-Time Reconfiguration, or RTR) must be rapid. Thus far, the means of altering the configuration of CCMs has relied on global control strategies that present a fundamental bottleneck to the potential bandwidth of configuration information flowing into the CCM. Wormhole Run-time Reconfiguration is presented as a distributed control methodology that is applicable not only to the problem of device-level CCM reconfiguration, but to system-wide concurrent computing as a whole. The Virginia Tech Colt/Stallion integ...
Ray Bittner, Peter M. Athanas
Added 07 Aug 2010
Updated 07 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1997
Where FPGA
Authors Ray Bittner, Peter M. Athanas
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