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Warp architecture and implementation

Marco Annaratone, E. Arnould, Thomas Groß, H. T. Kung, Monica S. Lam, O. Menzilcioglu, Ken Sarocky, Jon A. Webb

Year
1998
Citations
74
Access
Open access

Abstract

A high-performance systolic army computer called Warp has been designed and mnsuucted. The machine ha a synolic prry of 10 or more llncarly connected cells, each of which is a proptammable processor capable of performing 10 million floating-point operations per second (10 IMFLGPS). A lb-cell machine therefore ha a peak performance of 100 MFIBPS. Warp is integrated into a UNlX host system. Program development is supported by a compiler. llie fmt 10-d machine became operational in 1986. Low-level vision processing for robot vehicles is one of the first applicatiotts of the machino This paper dcacribes the architecture and implementation of the Warp machine. and justiile-s and evaluates some of the amhita? anal features with systan, software and applimtion considaathn 1. Int reduction Warp is a high-performance systolic array computer designed to provide computation power for signal, image and low-level vi& ptocmsing: the machine's first applimtions are vision-based control algorithms for robot vehicles, and image atul@s for large imege databases A full-aule Warp machine consists of a linear systolic array of 10 or more identical cells. each of which is a 10 MFLOPS programmable processor. The proccsor atnty is integrated in a powerful host system, which provides an adequate dam bandwidth to sustain the amty at full speed in the targeted applications, and a general purpose computing environmatt, cpefdlcally tmx. for application programa IIIS rcwarch aa rqpportd in part by Dafw Mvanccd Reaacb Fmjccu &cncy fDOl>l. monitored by tic Air Force Avionlm tiw under Contract P'33615--81.K-l539, and Naval E&uontc Systema Corn--

Keywords

Computer scienceLibrary science

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