Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher.
Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?
Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.
-
As AI continues to grow, modern applications are becoming more data- and compute-intensive, driving the development of specialized AI chips to meet these demands. One example is AMD's AI Engine (AIE), a dedicated hardware system that includes a 2D array of high-frequency very-long instruction words (VLIW) vector processors to provide high computational throughput and reconfigurability. However, AIE's specialized architecture presents tremendous challenges in programming and compiler optimization. Existing AIE programming frameworks lack a clean abstraction to represent multi-level parallelism in AIE; programmers have to figure out the parallelism within a kernel, manually do the partition, and assign sub-tasks to different AIE cores to exploit parallelism. These significantly lower the programming productivity. Furthermore, some AIE architectures include FPGAs to provide extra flexibility, but there is no unified intermediate representation (IR) that captures these architectural differences. As a result, existing compilers can only optimize the AIE portions of the code, overlooking potential FPGA bottlenecks and leading to suboptimal performance. To address these limitations, we introduce ARIES, an agile multi-level intermediate representation (MLIR) based compilation flow for reconfigurable devices with AIEs. ARIES introduces a novel programming model that allows users to map kernels to separate AIE cores, exploiting task- and tile-level parallelism without restructuring code. It also includes a declarative scheduling interface to explore instruction-level parallelism within each core. At the IR level, we propose a unified MLIR-based representation for AIE architectures, both with or without FPGA, facilitating holistic optimization and better portability across AIE device families. For the General Matrix Multiply (GEMM) benchmark, ARIES achieves 4.92 TFLOPS, 15.86 TOPS, and 45.94 TOPS throughput under FP32, INT16, and, INT8 data types on Versal VCK190 respectively. Compared with the state-of-the-art (SOTA) work CHARM for AIE, ARIES improves the throughput by 1.17x, 1.59x, and 1.47x correspondingly. For ResNet residual layer, ARIES achieves up to 22.58x speedup compared with optimized SOTA work Riallto on Ryzen-AI NPU. ARIES is open-sourced on GitHub: https://github.com/arc-research-lab/Aries.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 27, 2026
-
Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 27, 2026
-
Data centers have been relying on renewable energy integration coupled with energy efficient specialized processing units and accelerators to increase sustainability. Unfortunately, the carbon generated from manufacturing these systems is be- coming increasingly relevant due to these energy decarbonization and efficiency improvements. Furthermore, it is less clear how to mitigate this aspect of embodied carbon. As workloads continue to evolve over each hardware generation we explore the tradeoffs of fabricating new application-tuned hardware compared with more general solutions such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). We also explore how REFRESH FPGAs can amortize embodied carbon investments from previous generations to meet the requirements of future generations workloads.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 2, 2025
-
Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
-
While Vision Transformers (ViTs) have shown consistent progress in computer vision, deploying them for real-time decision-making scenarios (< 1 ms) is challenging. Current computing platforms like CPUs, GPUs, or FPGA-based solutions struggle to meet this deterministic low-latency real-time requirement, even with quantized ViT models. Some approaches use pruning or sparsity to reduce model size and latency, but this often results in accuracy loss. To address the aforementioned constraints, in this work, we propose EQ-ViT, an end-to-end acceleration framework with novel algorithm and architecture co-design features to enable real-time ViT acceleration on AMD Versal Adaptive Compute Acceleration Platform (ACAP). The contributions are four-fold. First, we perform in-depth kernel- level performance profiling & analysis and explain the bottlenecks for existing acceleration solutions on GPU, FPGA, and ACAP. Second, on the hardware level, we introduce a new spatial and heterogeneous accelerator architecture, EQ-ViT architec- ture. This architecture leverages the heterogeneous features of ACAP, where both FPGA and artificial intelligence engines (AIEs) coexist on the same system-on-chip (SoC). Third, On the algorithm level, we create a comprehensive quantization-aware training strategy, EQ-ViT algorithm. This strategy concurrently quantizes both weights and activations into 8-bit integers, aiming to improve accuracy rather than compromise it during quanti- zation. Notably, the method also quantizes nonlinear functions for efficient hardware implementation. Fourth, we design EQ- ViT automation framework to implement the EQ-ViT architec- ture for four different ViT applications on the AMD Versal ACAP VCK190 board, achieving accuracy improvement with 2.4%, and average speedups of 315.0x, 3.39x, 3.38x, 14.92x, 59.5x, 13.1x over computing solutions of Intel Xeon 8375C vCPU, Nvidia A10G, A100, Jetson AGX Orin GPUs, and AMD ZCU102, U250 FPGAs. The energy efficiency gains are 62.2x, 15.33x, 12.82x, 13.31x, 13.5x, 21.9x.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2025
-
Dense matrix multiply (MM) serves as one of the most heavily used kernels in deep learning applications. To cope with the high computation demands of these applications, heterogeneous architectures featuring both FPGA and dedicated ASIC accelerators have emerged as promising platforms. For example, the AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP architecture combines general-purpose CPU cores and programmable logic with AI Engine processors optimized for AI/ML. An array of 400 AI Engine processors executing at 1 GHz can provide up to 6.4 TFLOPS performance for 32-bit floating-point (FP32) data. However, machine learning models often contain both large and small MM operations. While large MM operations can be parallelized efficiently across many cores, small MM operations typically cannot. We observe that executing some small MM layers from the BERT natural language processing model on a large, monolithic MM accelerator in Versal ACAP achieved less than 5% of the theoretical peak performance. Therefore, one key question arises:How can we design accelerators to fully use the abundant computation resources under limited communication bandwidth for end-to-end applications with multiple MM layers of diverse sizes? We identify the biggest system throughput bottleneck resulting from the mismatch between massive computation resources of one monolithic accelerator and the various MM layers of small sizes in the application. To resolve this problem, we propose the CHARM framework to composemultiple diverse MM accelerator architecturesworking concurrently on different layers within one application. CHARM includes analytical models which guide design space exploration to determine accelerator partitions and layer scheduling. To facilitate system designs, CHARM automatically generates code, enabling thorough onboard design verification. We deploy the CHARM framework on four different deep learning applications in FP32, INT16, and INT8 data types, including BERT, ViT, NCF, and MLP, on the AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP VCK190 evaluation board. Our experiments show that we achieve 1.46 TFLOPS, 1.61 TFLOPS, 1.74 TFLOPS, and 2.94 TFLOPS inference throughput for BERT, ViT, NCF, and MLP in FP32 data type, respectively, which obtain 5.29\(\times\), 32.51\(\times\), 1.00\(\times\), and 1.00\(\times\)throughput gains compared to one monolithic accelerator. CHARM achieves the maximum throughput of 1.91 TOPS, 1.18 TOPS, 4.06 TOPS, and 5.81 TOPS in the INT16 data type for the four applications. The maximum throughput achieved by CHARM in the INT8 data type is 3.65 TOPS, 1.28 TOPS, 10.19 TOPS, and 21.58 TOPS, respectively. We have open-sourced our tools, including detailed step-by-step guides to reproduce all the results presented in this paper and to enable other users to learn and leverage CHARM framework and tools in their end-to-end systems:https://github.com/arc-research-lab/CHARM.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available August 5, 2025
-
Fast-evolving artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms such as large language models have been driving the ever increasing computing demands in today’s data centers. Heterogeneous computing with domain-specific architectures (DSAs) brings many opportunities when scaling up and scaling out the computing system. In particular, heterogeneous chiplet architecture is favored to keep scaling up and scaling out the system as well as to reduce the design complexity and the cost stemming from the traditional monolithic chip design. However, how to interconnect computing resources and orchestrate heterogeneous chiplets is the key to success. In this paper, we first discuss the diversity and evolving demands of different AI workloads. We discuss how chiplet brings better cost efficiency and shorter time to market. Then we discuss the challenges in establishing chiplet interface standards, packaging, and security issues. We further discuss the software programming challenges in chiplet systems.more » « less
-
With the increase in the computation intensity of the chip, the mismatch between computation layer shapes and the available computation resource significantly limits the utilization of the chip. Driven by this observation, prior works discuss spatial accelerators or dataflow architecture to maximize the throughput. However, using spatial accelerators could potentially increase the execution latency. In this work, we first systematically investigate two execution models: (1) sequentially (temporally) launch one monolithic accelerator, and (2) spatially launch multiple accelerators. From the observations, we find that there is a latency throughput tradeoff between these two execution models, and combining these two strategies together can give us a more efficient latency throughput Pareto front. To achieve this, we propose spatial sequential architecture (SSR) and SSR design automation framework to explore both strategies together when deploying deep learning inference. We use the 7nm AMD Versal ACAP VCK190 board to implement SSR accelerators for four end-to-end transformer-based deep learning models. SSR achieves average throughput gains of 2.53x, 35.71x, and 14.20x under different batch sizes compared to the 8nm Nvidia GPU A10G, 16nm AMD FPGAs ZCU102, and U250. The average energy efficiency gains are 8.51x, 6.75x, and 21.22x, respectively. Compared with the sequential-only solution and spatial-only solution on VCK190, our spatial-sequential-hybrid solutions achieve higher throughput under the same latency requirement and lower latency under the same throughput requirement. We also use SSR analytical models to demonstrate how to use SSR to optimize solutions on other computing platforms, e.g., 14nm Intel Stratix 10 NX.more » « less
-
Arbitrary-precision integer multiplication is the core kernel of many applications including scientific computing, cryptographic algorithms, etc. Existing acceleration of arbitrary-precision integer multiplication includes CPUs, GPUs, FPGAs, and ASICs. To leverage the hardware intrinsics low-bit function units (32/64-bit), arbitrary-precision integer multiplication can be calculated using Karatsuba decomposition, and Schoolbook decomposition by decomposing the two large operands into several small operands, generating a set of low-bit multiplications that can be processed either in a spatial or sequential manner on the low-bit function units, e.g., CPU vector instructions, GPU CUDA cores, FPGA digital signal processing (DSP) blocks. Among these accelerators, reconfigurable computing, e.g., FPGA accelerators are promised to provide both good energy efficiency and flexibility. We implement the state-of-the-art (SOTA) FPGA accelerator and compare it with the SOTA libraries on CPUs and GPUs. Surprisingly, in terms of energy efficiency, we find that the FPGA has the lowest energy efficiency, i.e., 0.29x of the CPU and 0.17x of the GPU with the same generation fabrication. Therefore, key questions arise: Where do the energy efficiency gains of CPUs and GPUs come from? Can reconfigurable computing do better? If can, how to achieve that? We first identify that the biggest energy efficiency gains of the CPUs and GPUs come from the dedicated vector units, i.e., vector instruction units in CPUs and CUDA cores in GPUs. FPGA uses DSPs and lookup tables (LUTs) to compose the needed computation, which incurs overhead when compared to using vector units directly. New reconfigurable computing, e.g., “FPGA+vector units” is a novel and feasible solution to improve energy efficiency. In this paper, we propose to map arbitrary-precision integer multiplication onto such a “FPGA+vector units” platform, i.e., AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP architecture, a heterogeneous reconfigurable computing platform that features 400 AI engine tensor cores (AIE) running at 1 GHz, FPGA programmable logic (PL), and a general-purpose CPU in the system fabricated with the TSMC 7nm technology. Designing on Versal ACAP incurs several challenges and we propose AIM: Arbitrary-precision Integer Multiplication on Versal ACAP to automate and optimize the design. AIM accelerator is composed of AIEs, PL, and CPU. AIM framework includes analytical models to guide design space exploration and AIM automatic code generation to facilitate the system design and on-board design verification. We deploy the AIM framework on three different applications, including large integer multiplication (LIM), RSA, and Mandelbrot, on the AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP VCK190 evaluation board. Our experimental results show that compared to existing accelerators, AIM achieves up to 12.6x, and 2.1x energy efficiency gains over the Intel Xeon Ice Lake 6346 CPU, and NVidia A5000 GPU respectively, which brings reconfigurable computing the most energy-efficient platform among CPUs and GPUs.more » « less