loading...
 This Article 
   
 Share 
   
 Bibliographic References 
   
 Add to: 
 
Digg
Furl
Spurl
Blink
Simpy
Google
Del.icio.us
Y!MyWeb
 
 Search 
   
10th IEEE International Symposium on Asynchronous Circuits and Systems (ASYNC'04)
Long Wires and Asynchronous Control
Crete, Greece
April 19-April 23
ISBN: 0-7695-2133-9
Ron Ho, Sun Microsystems Research Laboratories
Jon Gainsley, Sun Microsystems Research Laboratories
Robert Drost, Sun Microsystems Research Laboratories
As integrated circuit technologies get smaller, circuit and architectural trends make transmitting data across long on-chip wires increasingly important yet increasingly expensive in both latency and throughput. Inserting repeaters can reduce latency by breaking up long wires with gain stages but offers only limited throughput improvement, while breaking long wires with clocked latches improves latency and throughput but requires generating fast local clocks. In contrast, asynchronous handshaking over long wires can improve both latency and bandwidth with lower control overhead. We introduce simple latency models that relate best stage separation to technology parameters. In addition, the transactional nature of handshaking presents a fundamental limitation on throughput exacerbated by long wires. We present a twin request/acknowledge control scheme that overcomes this throughput cost.
Citation:
Ron Ho, Jon Gainsley, Robert Drost, "Long Wires and Asynchronous Control," async, pp.240-249, 10th IEEE International Symposium on Asynchronous Circuits and Systems (ASYNC'04), 2004
Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use.