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Minimum-Congestion Placement for Y-interconnects: Some studies and observations
Porto Alegre, Brazil March 09-March 11
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ISVLSI.2007.66IEEE Computer Society Annual Symposiu ...
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Tuhina Samanta, Bengal Engineering & Science University, Howrah, India
Prasun Ghosal, Bengal Engineering & Science University, Howrah, India
Hafizur Rahaman, Bengal Engineering & Science University, Howrah, India
Parthasarathi Dasgupta, Bengal Engineering & Science University, Howrah, India

Y -interconnects for VLSI chips are based on the use of global and semi-global wiring in only 0 degree, 60 degree, and 120 degree. Though X-interconnects are fast replacing the traditional Manhattan (M) interconnects, the very recently proposed Y - interconnects have been observed to possess certain key advantages. Y -interconnects tend to consume less routing resources than M-interconnects. Unlike the X-interconnect architectures, Y -interconnect architectures support regular routing grid. This is indeed very important for simplifying manufacturing processes and applying the routing and design rule checking algorithms. Several efficient Y -routing algorithms have been proposed in literature. However, to the best of our knowledge, not much have been reported so far in designing algorithms for Y -interconnectbased VLSI module placement and its effects on the congestion or wire-lengths.

In this paper, in an attempt to fill the gap in the existing literature, we propose a novel simulated-annealing-based placement technique for mixed-sized cells which tries to reduce the congestion for Y -interconnects. The proposed method attempts to reduce the congestion, and observes the corresponding changes in the estimated lengths of the Y -interconnects. It has been implemented in Linux environment and experiments performed with randomly generated instances, and some well-known benchmarks. The wirelength estimates for the Y -interconnects, and Manhattan interconnects for the same placement instances are compared. Results obtained are quite encouraging. The experimental results for a specific number of iterations and cooling schedule show improvements in congestion in most of the cases.

Citation:
Tuhina Samanta, Prasun Ghosal, Hafizur Rahaman, Parthasarathi Dasgupta, "Minimum-Congestion Placement for Y-interconnects: Some studies and observations," isvlsi, pp.73-80, IEEE Computer Society Annual Symposium on VLSI (ISVLSI '07), 2007
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