作者yellowfishie (喵喵喵喵~~~)
看板NTUGIEE_EDA
标题[eetimes] IC routing contest boosts CAD research
时间Mon Mar 26 11:47:08 2007
IC routing contest boosts CAD research
(03/22/2007 2:15 H EDT)
An IC global routing contest at the International Symposium on Physical
Design (ISPD) this week (March 20) produced more than happy winners — it
showcased new directions for research in IC routing algorithms.
11 teams from academic and research institutes participated in the ISPD
contest, which was organized by IBM and sponsored by the ACM Special Interest
Group on Design Automation (SIGDA), IEEE Council on Electronic Design
Automation (CEDA) and the Semiconductor Research Corporation. "The purpose of
the contest is to guide researchers toward most urgent challenges in the EDA
industry, and also to map out state-of-the-art solutions," said ISPD 2007
chair Patrick Madden, professor at the State University of New York.
"High-quality and publicly available global routers will be very helpful for
CAD research," said Lou Scheffer, Cadence Design Systems fellow and ISPD 2006
chair. The contest, he noted, will help provide more realistic requirements
for IC placement algorithms. "This should lead to better placers in fairly
short order," Scheffer said. "Also, existing global routers should make it
easier to build an academic detailed router — perhaps our contest for next
year."
Under the direction of Gi-Joon Nam from IBM's Austin Research Laboratory, a
team of IBM engineers and university researchers defined performance metrics
for the contest, generated benchmarks from recent IBM circuits, wrote
evaluation scripts, and performed final scoring. Routers were compared based
on the number of routing violations (overflows) and total routing wire
length. Entries were scored separately for 2D and 3D routing.
David Pan, ISPD 2007 program chair and professor at the University of Texas
at Austin, noted that there's still some controversy over the methods used to
compare routers. He noted that BoxRouter from the University of Texas, which
placed second in the 3D category, actually completed the largest number of
circuits. "The ISPD community is still trying to define a good metric," Pan
said.
The winning entry in the 2D category was "Fairly Good Router" (FGR), written
in one month by Jarrod Roy, graduate student from the University of Michigan.
FGR also took third place in the 3D contest. "We plan to open-source it to
boost research in routing and help improve commercial EDA tools," said Igor
Markov, professor at the University of Michigan.
The winner of the 3D category was MaizeRoute, written in one month by Michael
Moffitt, PhD candidate at the University of Michigan. It also took second
place in the 2D category. MaizeRoute draws upon Moffitt's research in
artificial intelligence.
MaizeRoute contains only 1,500 lines of code. "I am very pleased that some of
the simplest algorithms won in this contest," Madden said. "This will keep
routing research practical and relevant to real-world applications."
http://tinyurl.com/2x7lbr
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1F:→ yellowfishie:1500 lines !! 03/26 11:47
2F:推 gwliao:MaizeRoute 真机车, 摆明来呛声. (/‵Д′)/~ ╧╧ 03/26 14:39
3F:推 gwliao:Moffitt是做planning方面,跟Igor做Floorist. 03/26 15:24