Elechitaya Suresh, Sanath Kumar ; Dr. Winser E Alexander, Committee Chair,Dr. William Rhett Davis, Committee Member,Dr. J. K. Townsend, Committee Member,Elechitaya Suresh, Sanath Kumar ; Dr. Winser E Alexander ; Committee Chair ; Dr. William Rhett Davis ; Committee Member ; Dr. J. K. Townsend ; Committee Member
Advancements in silicon technology have heralded an increase in device densities and consequently design complexity. The increasing complexity of modern System on a Chip designs dictates a cohesive methodology for co-simulation at both high and low abstraction levels, effective design space exploration, system integration and high simulation speeds. A single unified design flow would avoid many of the shortcomings faced by the traditional RTL approach to design and verification.This thesis investigated a SystemC based design methodology to model complex digital systems at multiple levels of abstraction. The SystemC language, which is a C++ class library, is a multi-paradigm language for hardware design and verification. The capabilities of SystemC in supporting timed behavior, hierarchy, concurrency,and creation of fast executable specifications of the target design have been demonstrated in our work. It was our aim to clearly represent the ability of the proposed design flow to capture and validate the details of a design at the system level of abstraction, starting with an abstract Functional Verification level, working our way through to the Cycle Accurate level. This was exemplified by the design of a complex Iterative Turbo Decoder algorithm as a prototype system to test our design flow. We compared the decoder behavior at the system level using SystemC and at the RTL using Verilog 2001. We found that simulations performed at the system level executed much faster than simulations at the RTL. We used the system level design to estimate round-off errors without having to refine our design to the RTL. We demonstrated the ease of architectural exploration using SystemC by implementing two classes of interleavers for the Turbo Decoder: the Pseudo Random and the 3GPP Standard Interleaver. We also performed a detailed power and area analysis on the RTL model using the SSHAFT tool. We established a single language framework that allows analysis of the trade-offs between hardware and software implementation models.
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System Level Design of a Turbo Decoder for Communication Systems