On the Impact of Routing and Network Size for Wireless Network-on-Chip Performance
Wireless Network-on-Chip or WiNoC is an alternative to traditional planar on-chip networks. On-chip wireless links are utilized to reduce latency between distant nodes due to its capability to communicate with far-away node within a single hop. This paper analyzes the impact of various routing schem...
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Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Proceeding |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2018
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/41633/1/Asrani%20Lit.pdf http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/41633/ |
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Summary: | Wireless Network-on-Chip or WiNoC is an alternative to traditional planar on-chip networks. On-chip wireless links are utilized to reduce latency between distant nodes due to its capability to communicate with far-away node within a single hop. This paper analyzes the impact of various routing schemes and the effect of WiNoC sizes on network traffic distributions compared to conventional mesh NoC. Radio hubs (4×4) are evenly placed on WiNoC to analyze global average delay, throughput, energy consumption and wireless utilization. For validation, three various network sizes (8×8, 16×16 and 32×32) of mesh NoC and WiNoC architectures are simulated on cycle-accurate Noxim simulator under numerous traffic load distributions. Simulation results show that WiNoC architecture with the 16×16 network size has better average speedup (∼1.2×) and improved network throughputs by 6.36% in non-uniform transpose traffic distribution. However, as the trade-off, WiNoC requires 63% higher energy consumption compared to the classical wired NoC mesh. |
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