On the Complexity of Designing Optimal Branch-and-Combine Clock Networks

  • Authors:
  • Ahmed El-Amawy;Priyalal Kulasinghe

  • Affiliations:
  • Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge, LA;Clarkson Univ., Potsdam, NY

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Computers
  • Year:
  • 1998

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Abstract

Recently, an unconventional clock distribution scheme, called Branch-and-Combine (BaC), has been proposed. The scheme is the first to guarantee constant skew upper bound irrespective of the clocked network's size. In BaC clocking, a set of interconnected nodes perform simple processing on clock signals such that the path from the source to any node is automatically and adaptively selected such that it is the shortest delay path. The graph underlying a BaC network is constrained by the requirement that each pair of adjacent nodes is in a cycle of length 驴k, where k is the feature cycle length. The graph representing such a network is called a BaC(k) graph. The feature cycle length (k) is an important parameter upon which skew bound and node function depend.In this paper, we study the complexity of the general problem of designing a minimum cost BaC network for clocking a data processing network of arbitrary topology such that a certain feature cycle length is satisfied. We define two versions of the problem, differing in the way we are allowed to place edges in the graph representing the BaC network. We show that, in both cases, the general optimization problem is NP-hard. We also provide efficient heuristic algorithms for both versions of the optimization problem. When k = 2, the two versions of the optimization problem become the same and can be solved in polynomial time. For k = 3, the complexity is still unknown.