Title: Semiconductor Design Solutions for IMS
1(No Transcript)
2Semiconductor Design Solutions for IMS
3Agenda
- IMS goals and implications
- Network media processing requirement
- Semiconductor design solutions
- Conclusions
4Media Compression Transport
- Media compression standards have been tightly
coupled with transport mechanism for
telecommunications from inception - TDM based PSTN is built on top of G.711 standard
- GSM is tied to GSM FR compression standard
- Rate-set 1 is built into the physical layer
protocol of CDMA system - Standards are snapshots of past technology
- G.729a/b was developed in 1995
- GSM AMR (AMR-NB) was developed in 1998
- Newer technologies available today can deliver
better performances and are more suitable for
targeted applications
5Issue With Current Systems
- Coupling of compression standard with transport
mechanism prevents use of newer or other
compression schemes, therefore limits market
growth - Physical layer changes are often required,
resulting in unwanted equipment cost increase or
even new upgrades - Deployment of EVRC on CDMA networks caused large
scale network equipment upgrade - 3G wireless and NGN core network - IP based
- It is logical to make access networks that
support IP based technologies and services in
order to simplify network equipment - Fix-Mobile Convergence (FMC) becomes possible and
has many advantages to support new value-add
services
6IMS Objectives
- Deliver richer, more personalized IP based
multi-media communication services - Fully integrated real-time or non-real-time
multi-media communication services - Network Convergence (FMC) allowing seamless
mobility across heterogeneous networks such as
fixed, mobile, broadband, etc. - Support for third-party content and services,
therefore, a vastly expanded universe of
potential revenue streams - Improve user experience in setting up multiple
services in one single session or multiple
simultaneously synchronized sessions
7Media Transport Characteristics
- Media transport over IP framework
- Voice / video over IP
- IP based content delivery
- Services become independent from access or
transport technologies - E.g. instant messenger service on a PC or on a
cell-phone - Compression standards are no longer tied to
physical layer protocols - Seamless transition of media type in a single
communication session - Text, video, voice, audio
- Different QoS expectations based on purchased /
used access technologies - Users generally expect higher QoS on fixed line,
especially with broadband access while wireless
users might accept a gracefully reduced QoS - Services expansion
- Ease of introduction of new media processing
standards or DSP functions
8IMS Network Media Processing Requirement
- Simultaneous support of wireline / wireless media
compression standards - Due to IPR cost and associated complexity, it is
unreasonable to assume end-points would support
all media processing standards - Transcoding / transrating to guarantee
inter-operability - IMS core network equipment entities need to
support transcoding / transrating in order to
bridge end-points that dont have a common media
compression scheme - Multi-media conferencing
- Rich contents
- Wide-band voice, high quality audio
- Different service quality grades
- Chargeable and manageable
- Future proof
- To support new services that might require
introduction of new media standards
9Manufacturers Challenges
- Cost effective support of large amounts of
essential features - Voice
- Wireline G.711, G.726, G.728, G.729a/b,
G.723.1/a, G.729e/g, G.722, G.722.1, G.722.2,
G.729.1, iLBC - W-CDMA/GSM FR, HR, EFR, GSM AMR, AMR-NB, AMR-WB
- CDMA QCELP8K/13K, EVRC, EVRC-B, VMR, SMV
- Video
- H.263, H.264, MPEG-4, AVC, WMV, MJPEG, etc.
- Packet / Protocol processing
- TFO, TrFO, CSD, CTM, TTY/TTD, H.324M, Media
Forking, Lawful Interception, Encryption, etc. - Need non-standard based advanced DSP functions
- Multi-party, multi-standards, multi-interfaces
(e.g. TDM, Packet side) conference bridge - Transcoding between different standards /
Transrating within a standard - Synchronization amongst media streams, presumably
processed by different HW elements - Future proof
- SW upgradeable architecture
10IMS / FMC MGW Requirements
- VoIP / Wireless TDM-to-Packet capability
- Wireline VoIP
- High density G.711 only Trunk GW Low latency
G.711 only Trunk GW - PacketCable
- Wireless media GW or base-station base-band
processing - W-CDMA / GSM
- CDMA2000 / CDMA
- TD-SCDMA
- Packet-to-Packet capability
- Transcoding without pay-load format conversion,
e.g., CDMA(EVRC)??VoIP(EVRC) - Transcoding with pay-load format conversion,
e.g., IuUP(AMR-NB)??VoIP(G.729AB), or
IuUP(AMR-WB)??VoIP(G.729.1-WB) - Packet-side conferencing
- Mixture of TDM-to-Packet and Packet-to-Packet
capability - Multi-function media gateway
- Network convergence MGW
11Industry Solution Trends
- IMS ready SoC solutions
- Simultaneous support of all media compression
standards on the same chip (eg. Mindspeed
Comcerto for voice) - Future proof capability based on downloadable
HW/SW architecture - Often it is a clean and optimal design from
ground up - Manufacturer in-house development
- Typically by established equipment manufacturers
- Evolved either from fixed-line MGW, or wireless
MGW - Might be sub-optimal optimized MGW for
fixed-line NGN might not have the right HW/SW
architecture or resources mixture to also be
optimized for wireless applications - Future proof concern
- E.g., existent HW processing capacity and memory
space
12Chip Technology Solutions
- CMOS Scaling Limit Implications
13CMOS Scaling Limits
- Electrical consequences of industry-trend
scaling (points) are contrasted to classic
scaling (dashed curves). While the inverter delay
scales nearly the same as the classic case (as
LGATE), the active-power density does not.
Instead, the active-power density increases with
decreasing LGATE because of the lag in VDD
reduction, which is only partially mitigated by a
reduction in GGATE. IDSAT is the drain current
drawn with the gate and drain voltages set at the
nominal power-supply voltage, VDD. - E.J. Nowak, IBM J. RES. DEV. VOL. 46 NO. 2/3
MARCH/MAY 2002
14The Rise of Leakage Power
- Active-power density and subthreshold-leakage-pow
er density trends calculated from industry trends
are plotted vs. LGATE (points), for a junction
temperature of 25C. Empirical extrapolations
(dashed curves) suggest that subthreshold power
will equal active power at LGATE 20 nm this
point is encountered closer to LGATE 50 nm when
elevated temperatures, typically required of
applications, are factored in. This collision,
already encountered by applications that are more
power-sensitive, will spur further circuit and
technology design efforts to manage subthreshold
leakages.
15CMOS Scaling Conclusions
- CMOS scaling continues to provide more
transistors per die area - Cost per transistor continues downward square
of gate length - CMOS scaling continues to provide faster
transistors - Inverter delays decreasing one over the gate
length - CMOS scaling is stalling on active power
improvements - About same switching power density (about same
power per area) - CMOS scaling is getting worse on in-active power
- High temperature can make this exponentially worse
The Predominate CMOS SoC Design Limits are Now
Power and Thermal Density Costs
16Chip Architecture Solutions
- Increasing Thread Level Parallelism
17Processor Architecture Trends (Multi-Core)
- Discovering Multi-Core Extending the Benefits
of Moores Law - Intel Technology Magazine
July 2005. - First, memory speeds are not increasing as
quickly as logic speeds. - As interconnects stretch from hundreds to
thousands of meters in length on a single
processor, path delays cancel the speed
increases of the transistors. - A 1993-era Intel Pentium processor had around 3
million transistors while todays Intel Itanium
2 processor has nearly 1 billion transistors. - If this rate continued, Intel processors would
produce more heat per square centimeter than the
surface of the sunwhich is why the problem of
heat is already setting hard limits to
frequency.
Conclusion Multi-core chips do more work per
clock cycle, and thus can be designed to operate
at lower frequencies than their single-core
counterparts. Since power consumption goes up
proportionally with frequency, multi-core
architecture gives engineers the means to address
the problem of runaway power and cooling
requirements.
18Processor Architecture Trends (Large On-Chip
Memory)
- Off-chip memory access performance hasnt kept
pace - DDR2-667MHz vs. 3GHz processors
- Trend is to incorporate larger wider internal
memories - 2MByte internal caches, etc.
- 256 bit wide access on chip access, etc.
- Simultaneous support of large number of media
compression standards can only be possible by
using external memories - 64MBytes external memory capacity vs. 2-5MBytes
internal memory capacity
19Chip Architecture Conclusions
- Power and thermal density limits are driving chip
architectures from frequency scaled single cores
to area scaled multi-cores - Intel Pentium 4 to Intel Pentium D (Dual)
- 90nm 3.83GHz to 3.2GHz
- AMD Athlon FX to AMD Athlon X2 Dual
- 90nm 2.8GHz to 2.6GHz
- Further power and performance gains come from
incorporating application specific processors
with multi-core general purpose processors - X-Box 360 Xeon Processor Three 3GHz Cores
Graphic Processor
Processor Architectures are Trending Away from
Frequency Scaling of General Purpose Processors
to Multi-Core Scaling of General and Application
Specific Processors
20VoIP Systems Solutions For IMS/FMC
- Application (VoIP) Specific Systems
21Multi-Core Solutions
- In VoIP SoC solutions, many identical VoIP
threads are run - This application decomposes nicely to many low
frequency parallel threads - The most optimum power, area, and cost solution
is to provide many application optimized
processors on a single die - For IMS/FMC applications, efficient support of
different VoIP threads is a must - Multi-core architecture fits this need nicely
22Infrastructure Multi-Core Solutions
- Comcerto 600
- 150nm CMOS process
- 6 cores (2 RISCs, 4 DSPs) 6 simultaneous VoIP
threads - Comcerto 700
- 130nm CMOS process
- 8 cores (2 RISCs, 6 DSPs) 8 simultaneous VoIP
threads - Comcerto 900
- 90nm CMOS process
- 18 cores (2 RISCs, 8 DSPs, 8 DSP CPs) 18
simultaneous Voice-o-IP or Video-o-IP threads
23Comcerto 900 Architecture
24Comcerto 900 DSP Sub-System
25Comcerto 900 SW Architecture
- Comcerto SW architecture from start was driven
by flexible channel type strategy that is now
fundamental for FMC, multi-function GW and SBC
applications - HW resources allocation strategy
- External SDRAM/DDRAM used for SW storage and
packet / network processing, providing future
upgradeability - Embedded RAM used for active program codes and
DSP context storage of active channels - All DSP cores run from the codes on E-RAM, so the
SoC itself is not limited to any particular
application - DSP processing power and tightly coupled fast
memories are used for active channels - Time division allocation of DSP resources
- Each DSP core and associated tightly coupled fast
memories are independently allocated from other
DSP cores - Time division allocation of DSP resources
- Intelligent resources manager to optimize HW
resources allocation and maximize efficiency
One AMR-NB channel with one frame processing
every 20ms
20ms
Example of Matisse DSP resources allocation
AMR-NB channel
G.729AB/20ms
G.711/20ms
EVRC-B channel
EVRC
Transcoding EVRC??G.729
G.729AB/10ms
Time
26Conclusions
- Telecommunication industry will move away from
tightly coupled compression standards and
access/transport networking. IMS seems to be a
good next step - FMC is an inevitable trend of the industry for
many economical reasons, and IMS is a good
framework for it - More demanding IMS network infrastructure
equipment - Support large amount of media compression
standards and processing functions - Flexible and efficient use of HW resources
- Future proof requirement
- Advanced non-standard based DSP technologies are
required to support future growth of IMS
applications - Semiconductor HW / SW architecture and design
capability are keys to support this evolution of
the telecom industry