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Distributed computing using Projective Geometry: Decoding of Error correcting codes

Distributed computing using Projective Geometry: Decoding of Error correcting codes. Nachiket Gajare, Hrishikesh Sharma and Prof. Sachin Patkar IIT Bombay 13/02/09. Background.

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Distributed computing using Projective Geometry: Decoding of Error correcting codes

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  1. Distributed computing using Projective Geometry: Decoding of Error correcting codes Nachiket Gajare, Hrishikesh Sharma and Prof. Sachin Patkar IIT Bombay 13/02/09

  2. Background • Projective Geometry : Derived from extension of a Galois field of a prime order p to a vector space of higher dimension • Useful properties of incidence and symmetry between subspaces of the geometry • Applications : Distributed computing, Encoding and decoding of error correcting codes

  3. Applications to distributed computing • Karmarkar’s perfect access patterns for multiple processors and memories • Interconnections between processors and memories based on connections of a projective geometry • A schedule of memory accesses per processor such that there are no access collisions • Such a schedule is generated due to the property of automorphisms in the geometry • Use of PG as a general computational model for part/whole of computations

  4. Area of current research • Linear block codes based on Projective Geometry • Low density Parity Check (LDPC) codes and Expander codes • Decoding of block PG-LDPC codes using Karmarkar’s perfect access patterns • Evaluation of the architecture on a Xilinx Virtex-V FPGA • Architecture proposed by Hrishikesh Sharma

  5. LDPC codes • k code bits, n-k parity bits involved in n-k parity check equations involving the code bits • Low no. of bits per parity check • Code represented by a bipartite Tanner graph

  6. Decoding of LDPC codes • Finding the most probable codeword that could have been sent, given the received word • Messages passed along the edge of the Tanner graph, representing the belief about the value of the node/parity of the check equation • Each type of node in the bipartite graph arithmetically compute the messages, in parallel synchronization with each other • Decoding ends when all the constraints are met

  7. DecoderSpecifications on the FPGA • 114 Processing Elements for decoding a code based on a 2-dimensional projective geometry over GF(7) • An upper limit of 150 PE’s on the best FPGA from Xilinx • Classical Belief Propagation algorithm in the logarithmic domain • 114 True Dual port Block RAM’s used as memory elements • Initial study on decoding a block of 57 bits and evaluating the performance of the PG interconnect

  8. Decoderfeatures • Use of optimized data representation width for maximizing the code performance over a noisy channel • Multiple memory accesses in one cycle possible due to Karmarkar’s perfect access schedule • Decoding expected to be faster due to higher girth of PG-codes • Deterministic nature of the decoding algorithm on the architecture simplifies the control logic • Expected run time complexity of approximately 25 clock cycles per iteration

  9. Current Status of work • Processing Elements designed and implemented • Memory modules as IP Block RAM cores from Xilinx CoreGen • Other arithmetic cores customized and implemented using Xilinx CoreGen • Sequential addressing scheme used for memory access • Simulation planning ongoing

  10. Proposed Evaluation • Functional correctness and performance of the perfect access patterns • Expected to perform better than CPU based decoders • Verification of a computational schedule folded on a smaller no. of PE’s • Throughput of the decoder to match the requirements in areas like magnetic storage systems • Focus on ASIC design • To provide the required performance for practical applications • To achieve the scalability for larger codes

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