Open Topics

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Description

In today's technology nodes a growing number of chips contain safety-critical components which are used in advanced driver assistance and in future for level 5 full self driving vehicles. The chips used in this area have demanding requirements for long-term reliability which increases the simulation runtime for test validation. Therefore eletronic design automation tools are mostly compute intensive when running circuit simulations and result therefore in a bottleneck, when simulated with multi-million gate designs.

Problem statement

This bachelor thesis focus on implementing an optimized greedy algorithm in C++ that groups parallel computable faults together and therefore optimizes both the runtime of the greedy algorithm and the runtime of the GPU-accelerated fault simulation. Figure 1 shows a simple example of this idea. The evaluation of this work is done by comparing the new implemented algorithm with an existing approach implemented in Java [2].

Solution aspects

  • Literature survey on the problem
  • Implement and evaluate both approaches
  • Using GPU-Simulation
  • Evaluation of the approach by means of simulation

Requirements

  • Interest in working in a current research project FAST supported by the DFG
  • Skills in C++, git, cmake, (a little bit Java)

Literature

  • E. Schneider, "Mulit-level simulation of nano-electronic digital circuits on GPUs" - Dissertation, University of Stuttgart 2019.
  • E. Schneider, S. Holst, M. A. Kochte, X. Wen and H. Wunderlich, "GPU-accelerated small delay fault simulation", 2015 Design, Automation & Test in Europe Conference & Exhibition (DATE), Grenoble, France, 2015, pp. 1174-1179.

Contact

Jan Dennis Reimer, M.Sc.
E-Mail: jan.dennis.reimer@uni-paderborn.de
Telefon: 05251 60-3922
Raum: P1.6.08.4

 

Open Topics for Theses

Within the framework of our research activities new topics for theses evolve regularly. Interested students can contact Prof. Dr. Sybille Hellebrand directly.