Surviving the SOC Revolution
A Guide to Platform-Based Design
Inbunden, Engelska, 1999
Av Henry Chang, L.R. Cooke, Merrill Hunt, Grant Martin, Andrew McNelly, Lee Todd, L. R. Cooke, Larry Cooke, L R Cooke
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The aim of Surviving the SOC Revolution: A Guide to  Platform-Based Design is to provide the engineering community  with a thorough understanding of the challenges involved when moving  to system-on-a-chip and deliver a step-by-step methodology to get them  there. Design reuse is most effective in reducing the cost and development  time when the components to be shared are close to the final  implementation. On the other hand, it is not always possible or  desirable to share designs at this level, since minimal variations in  specification can result in different, albeit similar,  implementations. However, moving higher in abstraction can eliminate  the differences among designs, so that the higher level of abstraction  can be shared and only a minimal amount of work needs to be carried  out to achieve final implementation. The ultimate goal is to create a library of functions and of hardware  and software implementations that can be used for all new designs. It  is important to have a multilevel library, since it is often the case  that the lower levels that are closer to the physical implementation  change because of the advances in technology, while the higher levels  tend to be stable across product versions. It is most likely that the preferred approaches to the implementation  of complex embedded systems will include the following aspects:     Design costs and time are likely to dominate the  decision-making process for systems designers. Therefore, design reuse  in all its shapes and forms will be of paramount importance. Designs have to be captured at the highest level of abstraction to be  able to exploit all the degrees of freedom that are available. Next-generation systems will use a few highly complex (Moore's Law  Limited) part-types, but many more energy-power-cost-efficient,  medium-complexity (10M-100M) gates in 50nm technology chips, working  concurrently to implement solutions to complex sensing, computing, and  signaling/actuating problems. Such chips will most likely be  developed as an instance of a particular platform. That is, rather  than being assembled from a collection of independently developed  blocks of silicon functionality, they will be derived from a specific  `family' of rnicro-architectures, possibly oriented toward a  particular class of problems, that can be modified (extended or  reduced) by the system developer. These platforms will be  highly programmable. Both system and software reuse impose a  design methodology that has to leverage existing implementations  available at all levels of abstraction. £/LIST£ This book deals with the basic principles of a design methodology that  addresses the concerns expressed above. The platform concept is  carried throughout the book as a unifying theme to reuse. This is the  first book that deals with the platform-based approach to the design  of embedded systems and is a stepping stone for anyone who is  interested in the real issues facing the design of complex  systems-on-chip. From the Preface by Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum1999-11-30
 - Mått156 x 234 x 19 mm
 - Vikt531 g
 - FormatInbunden
 - SpråkEngelska
 - Antal sidor236
 - Upplaga1999
 - FörlagKluwer Academic Publishers
 - ISBN9780792386797