Virtual Cycle-accurate Hardware and Software Co-simulation Platform for Cellular IoT

University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för elektro- och informationsteknik

Abstract: Modern embedded development flows often depend on FPGA board usage for pre-ASIC system verification. The purpose of this project is to instead explore the usage of Electronic System Level (ESL) hardware-software co-simulation through the usage of ARM SoC Designer tool to create a virtual prototype of a cellular IoT modem and thereafter compare the benefits of including such a methodology into the early development cycle. The virtual system is completely developed and executed on a host computer, without the requirement of additional hardware. The virtual prototype hardware is based on C++ ARM verified cycle-accurate models generated from RTL hardware descriptions, High-level synthesis (HLS) pre-synthesis SystemC HW accelerator models and behavioural models which implement the ARM Cycle-accurate Simulation Interface (CASI). The micro-controller of the virtual system which is based on an ARM Cortex-M processor, is capable of executing instructions from a memory module. This report documents the virtual prototype implementation and compares both the software performance and cycle-accuracy of various virtual micro-controller configurations to a commercial reference development board. By altering factors such as memory latencies and bus interconnect subsystem arbitration in co-simulations, the software cycle-count performance of the development board was shown possible to reproduce within a 5% error margin, at the cost of approximately 266 times slower execution speed. Furthermore, the validity of two HLS pre-synthesis hardware models is investigated and proven to be functionally accurate within three clock cycles of individual block latency compared to post-synthesis FPGA synthesized implementations. The final virtual prototype system consisted of the micro-controller and two cellular IoT hardware accelerators. The system runs a FreeRTOS 9.0.0 port, executing a multi-threaded program at an average clock cycle simulation frequency of 10.6 kHz.

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