Self-configurable architecture for reusable systems with Accelerated Relocation Circuit (SCARS-ARC)

Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), with partial reconfiguration (PR) technology present an attractive option for creating reliable platforms that adapt to changes in user objectives over time and respond to hardware/software anomalies automatically with self-healing action. Conventional solutions for partial reconfiguration based self-configurable architectures experience severe hardware limitations on ability to move any partially reconfigurable module to any available region of the reconfigurable fabric and ability to relocate the module quickly. In this study we adopt the hardware-based partial bitstream relocation technique, Accelerated Relocation Circuit (ARC), into the FPGA based wirelessly networked self-configurable architecture that employs traditional module based partial reconfiguration strategy. We show that the integrated architecture allows flexibility for module relocation, reduces the off-chip communication overhead, and observes up to 17x speedup for module relocation over the traditional Xilinx hardware internal configuration access port wrapper (HWICAP) based implementation.

[1]  D. Sciuto,et al.  Dynamic Reconfiguration: Core Relocation via Partial Bitstreams Filtering with Minimal Overhead , 2006, 2006 International Symposium on System-on-Chip.

[2]  Ulrich Rückert,et al.  REPLICA: a bitstream manipulation filter for module relocation in partial reconfigurable systems , 2005, 19th IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium.

[3]  Ali Akoglu,et al.  Hierarchical Built-in Self-testing and FPGA Based Healing Methodology for System-on-a-Chip , 2007, Second NASA/ESA Conference on Adaptive Hardware and Systems (AHS 2007).

[4]  Aravind Dasu,et al.  PRR-PRR Dynamic Relocation , 2009, IEEE Computer Architecture Letters.

[5]  Ali Akoglu,et al.  SCARS: Scalable Self-Configurable Architecture for Reusable Space Systems , 2008, 2008 NASA/ESA Conference on Adaptive Hardware and Systems.

[6]  John W. Lockwood,et al.  PARBIT: A Tool to Transform Bitfiles to Implement Partial Reconfiguration of Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) , 2001 .