Center for Embedded Computer Systems, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-2625, USA
Copyright © 2008 Rainer Dömer et al. This is an open access article distributed under the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
The constantly growing complexity of embedded systems is a challenge that drives the
development of novel design automation techniques. C-based system-level design addresses the
complexity challenge by raising the level of abstraction and integrating the design processes for
the heterogeneous system components. In this article, we present a comprehensive design
framework, the system-on-chip environment (SCE) which is based on the influential SpecC
language and methodology. SCE implements a top-down system design flow based on a
specify-explore-refine paradigm with support for heterogeneous target platforms consisting of
custom hardware components, embedded software processors, dedicated IP blocks, and complex
communication bus architectures. Starting from an abstract specification of the desired system,
models at various levels of abstraction are automatically generated through successive step-wise
refinement, resulting in a pin-and cycle-accurate system implementation. The seamless integration
of automatic model generation, estimation, and verification tools enables rapid design space
exploration and efficient MPSoC implementation. Using a large set of industrial-strength
examples with a wide range of target architectures, our experimental results demonstrate the
effectiveness of our framework and show significant productivity gains in design time.