8 resultados para Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA)
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
It is already more than 10 years that weblabs are seen as important resources to provide the experimental work required in engineering education. Several weblabs have been applied in engineering courses, but there are still unsolved problems related to the development of their infrastructures. For solving some of those problems, it was implemented a weblab with a reconfigurable infrastructure compliant with the IEEE1451.0 Std. and supported by Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology. This paper presents the referred weblab, and provides and analyses a set of researchers' opinions about the implemented infrastructure, and the adopted methodology for the conduction of real experiments.
Resumo:
Maintaining a high level of data security with a low impact on system performance is more challenging in wireless multimedia applications. Protocols that are used for wireless local area network (WLAN) security are known to significantly degrade performance. In this paper, we propose an enhanced security system for a WLAN. Our new design aims to decrease the processing delay and increase both the speed and throughput of the system, thereby making it more efficient for multimedia applications. Our design is based on the idea of offloading computationally intensive encryption and authentication services to the end systems’ CPUs. The security operations are performed by the hosts’ central processor (which is usually a powerful processor) before delivering the data to a wireless card (which usually has a low-performance processor). By adopting this design, we show that both the delay and the jitter are significantly reduced. At the access point, we improve the performance of network processing hardware for real-time cryptographic processing by using a specialized processor implemented with field-programmable gate array technology. Furthermore, we use enhanced techniques to implement the Counter (CTR) Mode with Cipher Block Chaining Message Authentication Code Protocol (CCMP) and the CTR protocol. Our experiments show that it requires timing in the range of 20–40 μs to perform data encryption and authentication on different end-host CPUs (e.g., Intel Core i5, i7, and AMD 6-Core) as compared with 10–50 ms when performed using the wireless card. Furthermore, when compared with the standard WiFi protected access II (WPA2), results show that our proposed security system improved the speed to up to 3.7 times.
Resumo:
Weblabs are spreading their influence in Science and Engineering (S&E) courses providing a way to remotely conduct real experiments. Typically, they are implemented by different architectures and infrastructures supported by Instruments and Modules (I&Ms) able to be remotely controlled and observed. Besides the inexistence of a standard solution for implementing weblabs, their reconfiguration is limited to a setup procedure that enables interconnecting a set of preselected I&Ms into an Experiment Under Test (EUT). Moreover, those I&Ms are not able to be replicated or shared by different weblab infrastructures, since they are usually based on hardware platforms. Thus, to overcome these limitations, this paper proposes a standard solution that uses I&Ms embedded into Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGAs) devices. It is presented an architecture based on the IEEE1451.0 Std. supported by a FPGA-based weblab infrastructure able to be remotely reconfigured with I&Ms, described through standard Hardware Description Language (HDL) files, using a Reconfiguration Tool (RecTool).
Resumo:
The new generations of SRAM-based FPGA (field programmable gate array) devices are the preferred choice for the implementation of reconfigurable computing platforms intended to accelerate processing in real-time systems. However, FPGA's vulnerability to hard and soft errors is a major weakness to robust configurable system design. In this paper, a novel built-in self-healing (BISH) methodology, based on run-time self-reconfiguration, is proposed. A soft microprocessor core implemented in the FPGA is responsible for the management and execution of all the BISH procedures. Fault detection and diagnosis is followed by repairing actions, taking advantage of the dynamic reconfiguration features offered by new FPGA families. Meanwhile, modular redundancy assures that the system still works correctly
Resumo:
This paper proposes an online mechanism that can evaluate the sensitivity of single event upsets (SEUs) of field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs). The online detection mechanism cyclically reads and compares the values form the external and internal configuration memories, taking into account the mask information. This remote detection method also signals any mismatch as a result of a SEU that affects both used and not-used FPGA parts, which maximizes the monitored area. By utilizing an external, Web-accessible controller that is connected to the test infrastructure, the possibility of running the same operation in a remote manner is enabled. Moreover, the need for a local memory to store the mask values is also eliminated.
Resumo:
Dynamically reconfigurable SRAM-based field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) enable the implementation of reconfigurable computing systems where several applications may be run simultaneously, sharing the available resources according to their own immediate functional requirements. To exclude malfunctioning due to faulty elements, the reliability of all FPGA resources must be guaranteed. Since resource allocation takes place asynchronously, an online structural test scheme is the only way of ensuring reliable system operation. On the other hand, this test scheme should not disturb the operation of the circuit, otherwise availability would be compromised. System performance is also influenced by the efficiency of the management strategies that must be able to dynamically allocate enough resources when requested by each application. As those resources are allocated and later released, many small free resource blocks are created, which are left unused due to performance and routing restrictions. To avoid wasting logic resources, the FPGA logic space must be defragmented regularly. This paper presents a non-intrusive active replication procedure that supports the proposed test methodology and the implementation of defragmentation strategies, assuring both the availability of resources and their perfect working condition, without disturbing system operation.
Resumo:
A crescente evolução dos dispositivos contendo circuitos integrados, em especial os FPGAs (Field Programmable Logic Arrays) e atualmente os System on a chip (SoCs) baseados em FPGAs, juntamente com a evolução das ferramentas, tem deixado um espaço entre o lançamento e a produção de materiais didáticos que auxiliem os engenheiros no Co- Projecto de hardware/software a partir dessas tecnologias. Com o intuito de auxiliar na redução desse intervalo temporal, o presente trabalho apresenta o desenvolvimento de documentos (tutoriais) direcionados a duas tecnologias recentes: a ferramenta de desenvolvimento de hardware/software VIVADO; e o SoC Zynq-7000, Z-7010, ambos desenvolvidos pela Xilinx. Os documentos produzidos são baseados num projeto básico totalmente implementado em lógica programável e do mesmo projeto implementado através do processador programável embarcado, para que seja possível avaliar o fluxo de projeto da ferramenta para um projeto totalmente implementado em hardware e o fluxo de projeto para o mesmo projeto implementado numa estrutura de harware/software.
Resumo:
Esta tese de dissertação tem como principal objetivo a implementação de controladores fracionários utilizando diapositivos analógicos FPAA (Field Programable Analog Array). Embora estes dispositivos já não sejam um tecnologia recente, não tiveram grande aceitação comercial, daí não ter sido grande a sua evolução nesta última década. Mas para a elaboração de alguns circuitos analógicos, nomeadamente filtros, amplificadores e mesmo controladores PID (Proporcional-Integrativo-Derivativo) analógicos torna-se numa ferramenta que pode facilitar o projeto e implementação. Para a realização deste estudo, utilizou-se a placa de desenvolvimento da Anadigm AN231K04-DVLP3 juntamente com o software disponibilizado pela mesma empresa, o AnadigmDesigner2. Para a simulação e observação dos resultados foi utilizada a DAQ (Data Acquisition) Hilink da Zelton juntamente com o software Matlab. De forma a testar a implementação dos controladores fracionários nas FPAA foram realizados alguns circuitos no software e enviados para a FPAA comparando os resultados obtidos na simulação com os visualizados no osciloscópio. Por último foi projetado um controlador PIlDm recorrendo aos métodos de aproximação inteira descritos neste documento implementados na FPAA recorrendo ao uso de filtros de primeira e segunda ordem.