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NAPA C: compiling for a hybrid RISC/FPGA architecture

by: M. B. Gokhale, J. M. Stone
FPGAs for Custom Computing Machines, 1998. Proceedings. IEEE Symposium on In FPGAs for Custom Computing Machines, 1998. Proceedings. IEEE Symposium on (1998), pp. 126-135, doi:10.1109/fpga.1998.707890  Key: citeulike:4178640

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Abstract

Hybrid architectures combining conventional processors with configurable logic resources enable efficient coordination of control with datapath computation. With integration of the two components on a single device, loop control and data-dependent branching can be handled by the conventional processor. While regular datapath computation occurs on the configurable hardware. This paper describes a novel pragma-based approach to programming such hybrid devices. The NAPA C language provides pragma directives so that the programmer (or an automatic partitioner) can specify where data is to reside and where computation is to occur with statement-level granularity. The NAPA C compiler, targeting National Semiconductor's NAPA1000 chip, performs semantic analysis of the pragma-annotated program and co-synthesizes a conventional program executable combined with a configuration bit stream for the adaptive logic. Compiler optimizations include synthesis of hardware pipelines from pipelineable loops


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