Multi-objective Optimisation of Digital Circuits based on Cell Mapping in an Industrial EDA Flow
This work addresses inefficiencies in industrial EDA flows for digital circuit design, offering a domain-specific incremental improvement.
The paper tackled the problem of accumulated inefficiencies in electronic design automation (EDA) by introducing a fully-automated, multi-objective flow that optimizes drive strength mapping, resulting in significant improvements in power, performance, and area metrics for benchmark circuits.
Modern electronic design automation (EDA) tools can handle the complexity of state-of-the-art electronic systems by decomposing them into smaller blocks or cells, introducing different levels of abstraction and staged design flows. However, throughout each independent-optimised design step, overhead and inefficiency can accumulate in the resulting overall design. Performing design-specific optimisation from a more global viewpoint requires more time due to the larger search space, but has the potential to provide solutions with improved performance. In this work, a fully-automated, multi-objective (MO) EDA flow is introduced to address this issue. It specifically tunes drive strength mapping, preceding physical implementation, through multi-objective population-based search algorithms. Designs are evaluated with respect to their power, performance and area (PPA). The proposed approach is aimed at digital circuit optimisation at the block-level, where it is capable of expanding the design space and offers a set of trade-off solutions for different case-specific utilisation. We have applied the proposed MOEDA framework to ISCAS-85 and EPFL benchmark circuits using a commercial 65nm standard cell library. The experimental results demonstrate how the MOEDA flow enhances the solutions initially generated by the standard digital flow, and how simultaneously a significant improvement in PPA metrics is achieved.