Book Image

Architecting and Building High-Speed SoCs

By : Mounir Maaref
5 (1)
Book Image

Architecting and Building High-Speed SoCs

5 (1)
By: Mounir Maaref

Overview of this book

Modern and complex SoCs can adapt to many demanding system requirements by combining the processing power of ARM processors and the feature-rich Xilinx FPGAs. You’ll need to understand many protocols, use a variety of internal and external interfaces, pinpoint the bottlenecks, and define the architecture of an SoC in an FPGA to produce a superior solution in a timely and cost-efficient manner. This book adopts a practical approach to helping you master both the hardware and software design flows, understand key interconnects and interfaces, analyze the system performance and enhance it using the acceleration techniques, and finally build an RTOS-based software application for an advanced SoC design. You’ll start with an introduction to the FPGA SoCs technology fundamentals and their associated development design tools. Gradually, the book will guide you through building the SoC hardware and software, starting from the architecture definition to testing on a demo board or a virtual platform. The level of complexity evolves as the book progresses and covers advanced applications such as communications, security, and coherent hardware acceleration. By the end of this book, you'll have learned the concepts underlying FPGA SoCs’ advanced features and you’ll have constructed a high-speed SoC targeting a high-end FPGA from the ground up.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: Fundamentals and the Main Features of High-Speed SoC and FPGA Designs
7
Part 2: Implementing High-Speed SoC Designs in an FPGA
12
Part 3: Implementation and Integration of Advanced High-Speed FPGA SoCs

Summary

In this closing chapter of Part 3 and this book, we looked at some more advanced applications where FPGA-based SoCs are well suited as a single-chip architecture. They offer a fast time-to-market product development, a lower product cost, and a lower power solution in comparison to multi-chip-based architectures. These advanced applications include sophisticated communication applications that follow the OSI model, or part of it. They also span industrial control applications such as modern PLCs with advanced computation capabilities and feature extensibility using the FPGA PL and DSP computation engines. As we examined in detail in this book, SoCs built using PL have optimal integration and interoperability between the Cortex-A9 CPU cluster and the PL. This flexible architecture offers many capabilities for building communication applications that benefit from the acceleration and filtering extensions that can be hosted in the FPGA logic. PLCs also require more at the Edge...