A Cost and Speed Model for k-ary n-Cube Wormhole Routers
IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
A Delay Model for Router Microarchitectures
IEEE Micro
The Nostrum Backbone - a Communication Protocol Stack for Networks on Chip
VLSID '04 Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on VLSI Design
DATE '03 Proceedings of the conference on Design, Automation and Test in Europe - Volume 1
Load Distribution with the Proximity Congestion Awareness in a Network on Chip
DATE '03 Proceedings of the conference on Design, Automation and Test in Europe - Volume 1
A Token-Managed Admission Control System for QoS Provision on a Best-Effort GALS Interconnect
Fundamenta Informaticae - Application of Concurrency to System Design
A Token-Managed Admission Control System for QoS Provision on a Best-Effort GALS Interconnect
Fundamenta Informaticae - Application of Concurrency to System Design
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The throughput of a network is limited due to several interacting components. Analysing simulation results made it clear that the component that was worth attacking was the exit bandwidth between the network and the connected resources. The obvious approach is to increase this bandwidth; the benefit is a higher throughput of the network and a significant lowering of the buffer requirements at the entry points of the network; this because worst case scenarios now happens at a higher injection rate. The result we present shows significant differences in throughput as well as in average and worst case latency.