Title: Demystifying DataDriven and Pausible Clocking Schemes
1Demystifying Data-Driven and Pausible Clocking
Schemes
- Robert Mullins
- Computer Architecture Group
- Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
- ASYNC 2007, 13th IEEE International Symposium on
Asynchronous Circuits and Systems
2System-Timing Emerging Challenges
- Current shift is from complex monolithic designs
to networks of energy efficient cores - Distinct block and system-level timing challenges
- Network-level timing
- Physically distributed
- Activity may be sparse
- Interconnect delay and power are significant
- Significant variations in temperature, supply
voltage and process parameters
Higher-level control, timing and scheduling is
naturally event-driven
3Combining Local and Global Approaches to Timing
- Synchronization free approaches
- Coping with metastability
- Timing-Safe
- Allocate a fixed period of time for metastability
to resolve, e.g. two flip-flop synchronizer - Value-Safe
- Wait for metastability to resolve, e.g. clock
stretching or pausing techniques - Clock is generated locally
- Value-safe ideas are less well understood,
avoided by industry
4Advantages of a value-safe approach
- Efficiency
- Synchronization delay is minimized
- Opportunities for optimization
- Robustness
- Inherently robust, no trade-off against
performance. - Only way to guarantee data is never lost, no
MTBF. Could still have functional failures if we
are delayed too long dont hit performance
requirements - Transparency
- Synchronous block is unaffected by clocking
wrapper. - Less true for traditional synchronization and
clock-gating approaches. - Simplicity and modularity
- I aim to illustrate how simple these schemes are
5Adding an asynchronous interface to a clock
generator
6Adding an asynchronous interface to a clock
generator
7Adding an asynchronous interface to a clock
generator
8Adding an asynchronous interface to a clock
generator
9Input register driven by a pausible clock
10Data-Driven Clock
Pausible Clock
- May need to add a mechanism to ensure block
receives enough clock edges, e.g. to flush
pipeline
- Need to add an explicit sleep mechanism if we
want to halt clock generator during periods of
inactivity
Helps classify and understand existing
techniques. In reality, the design space is a
continuum
11Stretchable Clocks
- A type of data-driven clock
- Rising clock edge is generated
- Stretch signal may be asserted (synchronously) in
response to clk - Low-phase of clock is stretched until some
operation has completed and stretch signal is
removed
12Stretchable Clocks
13Stretchable Clocks
14Stretchable Clocks
15Stretchable Clocks
16Stretchable Clocks
17Input Ports
- Arbitrated Inputs
- At most one input can be served per cycle
- Synchronised Inputs
- Cannot proceed until multiple inputs are ready
- Sampled Inputs
- Can progress with a variable number of data
inputs(or none) - Need to also choose event to trigger sampling of
inputs - Paper provides implementation details for each
input port type for pausible and data-driven
clock generators
18Output Ports
- Scheduled
- Ensure data is output on a particular clock
cycle, stall until data is consumed - Registered
- Addition of an output register allows next
computation to proceed while data is consumed - Polled
- Sample output port ready signal and take
appropriate action. Clock period is only ever
extended to allow metastability to resolve, not
because output is blocked.
19A GALS Wrapper Example
- Free running clock
- Asynchronous input
- we know nothing about when data will arrive
- For simplicity, lets assume we can always accept
new data - Registered output feeding asynchronous FIFO
Simple to combine clock generator, input and
output ports
20A GALS Wrapper Example Step 1.
Local clock generator with H/S interface
21A GALS Wrapper Example Step 2.
Pausible Clock Template
22A GALS Wrapper Example Step 3.
Provide registered output port support
(stretchable clock template)
23A GALS Wrapper Example Step 4.
24Data-Driven Clocking for On-Chip Networks
- Why is global synchrony limiting for on-chip
networks? - Reconfigurable networks, adaptive low-voltage
interconnect drivers, irregular topologies, . - Problem with traditional synchronization
techniques - Latency (could easily double best-case latency,
our routers are single-cycle support VCs
30FO4) - Problems with fully-asynchronous implementations
- Latency (for the router designs we have examined)
- More difficult to speculate? Scheduling is
expensive?
25Data-Driven Clocking for On-Chip Routers
- Router should be clocked when one or more inputs
are valid (or flits are buffered) - Elevator analogy
- Free running (paternoster) elevator
- Chain of open compartments
- Must synchronise before you jump on!
- Traditional elevator (data-driven clock)
- Wait for someone to arrive
- Close doors, decide who is in and who is out
- Metastability issue again (potentially painful!)
26Data-Driven Clock with Sampled Inputs
Either admitted or locked out
Incoming data
Local Clock Generator Template
Sample inputs when at least one input is ready
(and clock is low)
Assert Lock
(Close Lift Doors)
27Clock Tree Insertion Delays
- Delay from root to leaf of clock tree can be
considerable (certainly non-zero!) - If every clock cycle is the same, this clock
insertion delay is not normally an issue - If we stretch the clock the insertion delay must
be considered in our timing analysis (also true
for clock gating in synchronous world) - Not difficult to handle, but can increase time
required to admit new data
28Clock Tree Insertion Delays
29Clock Tree Insertion Delays
- How do we handle multi-cycle insertion delays?
- In practice, we would want to avoid very large
synchronous blocks - Need to ensure we admit data on the correct clock
cycle - Cannot cheat and promote data!
We simply remember on which clock cycle data has
been scheduled to be admitted
30Summary
- Value-safe techniques are simple and robust
- Powerful framework for composing synchronous
sub-systems - Build efficient event-driven global communication
and scheduling infrastructure? - Scope for supporting low-power techniques?
(self-timed power-gating, DVFS support,
timing-speculation) - Scope for exploiting event-driven scheduling and
clocking at system-level. - Synchronization costs are low enough to prompt
use in on-chip network applications - More in the paper, aims to be a useful survey and
hopefully fills some gaps too.
31Thank You!