Are you Y. Harel?

Claim your profile

Publications (2)1.78 Total impact

  • Source
    Article: SODA: A High-Performance DSP Architecture for Software-Defined Radio
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Software-defined radio (SDR) belongs to an emerging class of applications with the processing requirements of a supercomputer but the power constraints of a mobile terminal. The authors developed the signal-processing on-demand architecture (SODA), a fully programmable architecture that supports SDR, by examining two widely differing protocols, W-CDMA and 802.11A. It meets power-performance requirements by separating control and data processing and by employing ultrawide SIMD execution
    IEEE Micro 02/2007; 27(1):114-123. · 1.78 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Conference Proceeding: SODA: A Low-power Architecture For Software Radio
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The physical layer of most wireless protocols is traditionally implemented in custom hardware to satisfy the heavy computational requirements while keeping power consumption to a minimum. These implementations are time consuming to design and difficult to verify. A programmable hardware platform capable of supporting software implementations of the physical layer, or software defined radio, has a number of advantages. These include support for multiple protocols, faster time-to-market, higher chip volumes, and support for late implementation changes. The challenge is to achieve this without sacrificing power. In this paper, we present a design study for a fully programmable architecture, SODA, that supports software defined radio - a high-end signal processing application. Our design achieves high performance, energy efficiency, and programmability through a combination of features that include single-instruction multiple-data (SIMD) parallelism, and hardware optimized for 16bit computations. The basic processing element is an asymmetric processor consisting of a scalar and SIMD pipeline, and a set of distributed scratchpad memories that are fully managed in software. Results show that a four processor design is capable of meeting the throughput requirements of the W-CDMA and 802.11a protocols, while operating within the strict power constraints of a mobile terminal
    Computer Architecture, 2006. ISCA '06. 33rd International Symposium on; 02/2006