Benchmarking and analysis of architectures for CAD applications

The SPEC benchmark system has traditionally been used for evaluating computer architectures. However, this system is too general and does not accurately reflect the performance of architectures on domain-specific applications. Moreover the CPU95 benchmark suite used in the SPEC system is compute-intensive, while many important domains of applications have memory intensive algorithms. In this work, we present a benchmarking methodology for such an application domain-CAD for VLSI design. We have created a benchmark suite consisting of CAD applications from each stage in a typical VLSI design flow. To exercise the memory organization, each application is run on a sequence of input designs of increasing size. We observed that increasing the input size causes non-monotonic variations in the performance of different machines. We simulate the caches of the benchmarked architectures to assess the effect of memory organization on performance.