1 | \anrdoc{\begin{itemize} |
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2 | \item Presenter sous forme graphique un echeancier des differentes taches |
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3 | et leurs dependances (diagramme de Gantt par exemple). |
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4 | \item Presenter un tableau synthetique de l'ensemble des livrables du |
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5 | projet (numero de tache, date, intitule, responsable). |
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6 | \item Preciser de facon synthetique les jalons scientifiques et/ou |
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7 | techniques, les principaux points de rendez-vous, les points bloquants ou |
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8 | aleas qui risquent de remettre en cause l'aboutissement du projet ainsi que |
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9 | les reunions de projet prevues.\end{itemize}} |
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10 | |
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11 | \definecolor{gtcBoxHeavy}{rgb}{0.10,0.10,0.90} |
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12 | \definecolor{gtcBoxLight}{rgb}{0.9,0.90,0.99} |
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13 | \definecolor{gtcTaskBG0} {rgb}{0.99,0.90,0.7} |
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14 | \definecolor{gtcTaskBG1} {rgb}{0.90,0.99,0.7} |
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15 | \definecolor{gtcMilestone}{rgb}{0.9,0.4,0.4} |
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16 | \immediate\write\ganttdata{ML=6 ML=12 ML=18 ML=27} |
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17 | %\def\ganttlabelstyle#1{\begin{small}#1\end{small}} |
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18 | \def\ganttlabelstyle#1{\begin{small}\hyperlink{#1}{#1}\end{small}} |
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19 | \def\gantttitlestyle#1{\begin{scriptsize}\textit{#1}\end{scriptsize}} |
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20 | |
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21 | \begin{figure}\leavevmode\center |
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22 | \hypersetup{ |
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23 | %backref=true, |
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24 | %pagebackref=true, |
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25 | %hyperindex=true, |
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26 | colorlinks=true, %colorise les liens |
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27 | breaklinks=true, %permet le retour à la ligne dans les lien |
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28 | urlcolor= blue, %couleur des hyperliens |
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29 | linkcolor= black %couleur des liens internes |
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30 | } |
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31 | \hspace*{-.6cm} |
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32 | \input{gantt.tex} |
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33 | \caption{\label{gantt}Gantt diagram of deliverables} |
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34 | \end{figure} |
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35 | |
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36 | %\begin{figure}\leavevmode\center |
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37 | %\hspace*{-.4cm}%\vspace{-1.5cm} |
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38 | %\input{gantt1.tex} |
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39 | %\caption{\label{gantt1}Gantt diagram of deliverables (task-1 to task-6)} |
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40 | %\end{figure} |
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41 | % |
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42 | %\begin{figure}\leavevmode\center |
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43 | %\hspace*{-.4cm}%\vspace{-1.5cm} |
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44 | %\input{gantt2.tex} |
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45 | %\caption{\label{gantt2}Gantt diagram of deliverables (task-7 and task-8)} |
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46 | %\end{figure} |
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47 | |
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48 | The figure~\ref{gantt} presents the Gantt diagram of the project. |
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49 | %The figures~\ref{gantt1}~\&~\ref{gantt2} present the Gantt diagram of the project. |
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50 | Before the final release (T0+36), there are 4 milestones (red lines on the figures) at |
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51 | $T0+6$, $T0+12$, $T0+18$ and $T0+27$ that are rendez-vous points of the precedent |
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52 | deliverables. |
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53 | \begin{description} |
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54 | \item[Milestone 1 ($T0+6$)] |
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55 | Specification of COACH inputs, of the \xcoach format and of |
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56 | the demonstatrors as a reference software. |
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57 | \item[Milestone 2 ($T0+12$)] |
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58 | The first COACH release. At this step the demonstrators are |
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59 | written in the COACH input format. This COACH release allows to prototype |
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60 | and to generate the FPGA-SoC. |
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61 | The main restrictions are: |
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62 | 1) Only the neutral architectural template is supported, |
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63 | 2) HAS is not available (but prototyping with virtual coprocessors is available), |
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64 | 3) Enhanced communication schemes are not available. |
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65 | 4) ASIP compilation flow is not available. |
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66 | \item[Milestone 3 ($T0+18$)] |
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67 | The second COACH release. At this step most of the COACH features are available. |
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68 | A preliminary version of the ASIP synthesis flow is supported, for a |
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69 | simple extensible MIPS model. The main restriction is that COACH can not yet |
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70 | generate FPGA-SoC for \altera and \xilinx architectural templates. |
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71 | The others restriction is that the HAS tools are not yet fully operational. |
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72 | \item[Milestone 4 ($T0+27$)] |
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73 | The pre-release of the COACH project. The full design flow is supported. |
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74 | The main restrictions are: |
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75 | 1) Automatic frequency calibration of coprocessor is not available. |
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76 | 2) Automatic HPC set up is not yet available. |
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77 | 3) NIOS processor instruction set extension is supported, but only for user |
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78 | specified patterns. |
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79 | 4) GAUT enhancements are not available. |
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80 | \item[Final Release ($T0+36$)] |
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81 | |
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82 | \end{description} |
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83 | This organisation allows the project to globally progress step by step mixing |
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84 | development and demonstrator deliverables. |
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85 | Hence, demonstrator feed-back will arrive early and so the risk to point out |
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86 | incompatibility at the integration phase is significantly reduced. |
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87 | \par |
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88 | The risks that have been identified at the beginning of the project are the following: |
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89 | \begin{description} |
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90 | \item[\xcoach format ({\NOVERSspecXcoachDoc}, {\NOVERSspecXcoachToCA})] |
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91 | Partners have to agree on a convenient exchange format for all tools involved. |
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92 | Because all the HAS tools rely on it, the \xcoach format specification is a |
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93 | crucial step. |
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94 | There are no work-around but as mentionned in section~\ref{xcoach-problem} |
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95 | (page~\pageref{xcoach-problem}) the five academic partners have worked on it |
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96 | for a full year and a preliminary document already exists. |
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97 | %\item[\xcoachplus format (\novers{\specXcoachDoc}, |
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98 | % \novers{\specXcoachToSystemC}, \novers{\specXcoachToVhdl})] |
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99 | % Its aim is the generation of the coprocessors (hardware \& prototyping model). |
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100 | % By centralizing the coprocessor generation, it guarantees their functioning |
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101 | % independently of the used HAS tools. |
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102 | % Our experience with UGH and GAUT give us confidence in the succes of this |
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103 | % task. |
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104 | \item[Virtual prototyping ({\NOVERScsgImplementation})] |
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105 | In this project, only the virtual prototyping of the neutral architectural |
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106 | template is supported. |
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107 | We think that this restriction is not a serious problem. |
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108 | Indeed the \altera \& \xilinx architectural templates being architecturally close of |
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109 | the neutral architectural template, an efficient software/hardware partition |
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110 | on the neutral architectural template is also an efficient on the other |
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111 | architectural templates. |
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112 | The project will allow an experimental verification of this assumption. |
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113 | % \item[Virtual prototyping of \altera \& \xilinx architectural templates |
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114 | % ({\NOVERScsgImplementation})] |
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115 | % The SoCLib component library contains several SystemC models used for the |
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116 | % virtual prototyping of the \altera and \xilinx architectural templates |
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117 | % (NIOS and \xilinxcpu processor cores). |
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118 | % Nevertheless, at this time we do not know how many IP cores SystemC |
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119 | % simulation models have to be developped. |
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120 | % If the workload of this simulation model development is too important, |
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121 | % virtual prototyping of those architectural templates will not be directly |
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122 | % supported. |
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123 | % The three architectural templates being quite similar, the virtual |
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124 | % prototyping will use the neutral architectural template. |
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125 | \item[VCI/AVALON \& VCI/\xilinxbus bridges ({\NOVERShpcAvalonBridge}, {\NOVERShpcPlbBridge})] |
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126 | These bridges may decrease the efficiency of the \altera \& \xilinx |
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127 | architectural templates. |
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128 | Developing the communication components (MWMR) for the AVALON and \xilinxbus buses |
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129 | will correct this problem. |
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130 | % If one of these tasks is impossible or too important or leads to inefficiency, |
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131 | % it will be abandoned. |
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132 | % In this case, the neutral architectural template will not be available for HPC and |
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133 | % a SystemC VCI model corresponding to the PCI/X IP will be developped to allow |
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134 | % virtual prototyping. |
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135 | \end{description} |
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136 | \parlf |
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137 | Finally the list of all the deliverables is presented on figure~\ref{all-delivrables}. |
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138 | \begin{figure}[t]\leavevmode\center |
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139 | { |
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140 | \fontsize{7pt}{9pt}\selectfont |
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141 | \settowidth\desclen{XILINX RTL optimisation (5)} |
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142 | \def\Sformat#1{\textsc{#1}} |
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143 | %\hspace*{-2.5mm} |
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144 | \begin{minipage}{1.0\linewidth} |
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145 | \input{table_livrable_01.tex} |
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146 | \hfill\hspace*{1mm}\hfill |
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147 | \input{table_livrable_02.tex} |
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148 | \end{minipage} |
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149 | } |
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150 | \caption{\label{all-delivrables}All the deliverables} |
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151 | \end{figure} |
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