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词条 Stream Processors, Inc
释义

  1. Company history

     The Imagine Project  SPI established 

  2. Technology

     Architecture  Tools  Products  Support hardware and software 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox company
| name = Stream Processors Incorporated (SPI)
|logo =
|type=Private
| foundation = 2004
| location= Sunnyvale, California, United States
| key_people =Bill Dally, Co-Founder and ex-Chairman
| num_employees = Approximately 100 (2007)
| industry =Semiconductors-Specialized
| products= Digital Signal Processor
| homepage=www.streamprocessors.com
}}

Stream Processors, Inc was a Silicon Valley-based fabless semiconductor company specializing in the design and manufacture of high-performance digital signal processors for applications including video surveillance, multi-function printers and video conferencing. The company ceased operations in 2009.

Company history

Foundational work in stream processing was initiated in

1995 by a research team led by MIT professor Bill Dally. In 1996, he moved to Stanford University where he continued this work, receiving a multimillion-dollar

grant from DARPA with additional resources from Intel and

Texas Instruments to fund the development of a project called "Imagine"

- the first stream processor chip and accompanying compiler tools.

The Imagine Project

The goal of the Imagine project was to develop a

C programmable signal and image processor intended to provide both the performance density and efficiency of a

special-purpose processor (such as a hard-wired ASIC). The project successfully demonstrated the advantages of stream processing. Details on the Imagine project and its results are posted

on the Stanford Imagine project page. The work also showed that a number of applications

ranging from wireless baseband processing, 3D graphics, encryption, IP

forwarding to video processing could take advantage of the efficiency of stream processing. This research inspired other

designs such as GPUs from ATI Technologies as well as the Cell microprocessor from Sony, Toshiba, and IBM.

The main deliverables from the Imagine program included:

  • The Imagine Stream Architecture
  • The Stream programming model
  • Software development tools
  • Programmable graphics and real-time media applications
  • VLSI prototype (fabricated by TI)
  • Stream processor development platform (a prototype development board)

SPI established

Dally, together with other team members, obtained a license from Stanford to commercialize the

resulting technology. Stream Processors, Incorporated (SPI) was incorporated in

California in 2004. Professor Dally remained at Stanford and the company

hired industry veteran Chip Stearns   to become the President and CEO in December of that

year. Through June, 2006 SPI has been able to raise a total of $26M from a trio of notable venture capital firms - Austin Ventures, Norwest Venture Partners and the Woodside Fund.

The company launched its first two products concurrently with the International Solid State

Circuits Conference (ISSCC) in February, 2006[1] and

has introduced two others since.[2][3]

SPI has headquarters located in Sunnyvale, California as well as a software development group (SPI Software Technologies Pvt. Ltd) located in Bangalore, India.

In January 2009 Co-Founder Prof. Bill Dally accepted a position as Chief Scientist with NVIDIA Corporation.[4] At the same time he

resigned as chairman.[5] In an interview Dally reflected on his experiences with startups:[5]

" I have done several chip startups myself. It’s getting hard. The ante is very high. If you do a chip startup, you need patient investors with very deep pockets. It’s many tens of millions of dollars to get to a first product and $50 million to get to profits. That’s very difficult to do because investors want an exit some multiple over that investment. I am hoping we return to the days of frequent IPOs and get beyond the fire-sale acquisitions. That’s not what you can see right now. If it’s a programmable chip, the cost is even more."

In the summer of 2009 CEO Stearns left the company and was replaced by Mike Fister, an executive with senior level experience at Cadence Design Systems and Intel.

In September 2009 the company ceased operations.[6]

Technology

Similar to graphics and scientific computing, media and signal processing

are characterized by available data-parallelism, locality and a high computation

to global memory access ratio. Stream processing exploits these

characteristics using data-parallel processing fed by a distributed memory

hierarchy managed by the compiler. The main challenge for next generation massively parallel processors is data bandwidth, not computational resources. Unlike most conventional processors, the technology does not rely on a hardware cache - instead data movement is explicitly managed by the compiler and hardware.

The execution model is based on accelerating performance-critical functions (kernels) that process and

produce data records (streams). Kernels and streams are scheduled at compile-time and moved to on-chip memory at runtime via a scoreboard. The compiler analyses data live times

of streams to optimize allocation and minimize external memory bandwidth needs.

Streams and kernels loads can overlap with execution to improve latency

tolerance and the explicit data movement provides predictable performance. There

are no CPU cache misses and the design presents a single-core model to the

programmer – data-parallelism is within the kernels.

Architecture

The architecture includes a host CPU (System MIPS) for system-level tasks and a

DSP Coprocessor Subsystem where the DSP MIPS runs the main threads that make

kernel function calls to the Data Parallel Unit (DPU). For users that use

libraries, and don’t intend to develop DSP code, the architecture is a

MIPS-based system-on-a-chip with an API to a “black box”

coprocessor. The DPU Dispatcher receives kernel function calls to manage

runtime kernel and stream loads. One kernel at a time is executed across the

lanes, operating on local stream data stored in the Lane Register File of each lane. Each

lane has a set of VLIW ALUs and distributed operand register files (ORF)

allow for a large working data set and processing bandwidth exceeding 1 TeraByte/s. The Stream

Load/Store Unit provides gather/scatter with a wide variety of access patterns.

The InterLane Switch is a compiler-scheduled, full crossbar for high-speed

access between lanes.

Tools

SPI’s RapiDev Tools Suite leverages the

predictability of stream processing to provide a fast path to optimized

results using C programming. Starting with C reference code, the Fast

Functional Debugger (FFD) library plugs into standard tools, such as Microsoft

Visual Studio and GNU, and simulates the DPU to support re-structuring code to

kernels and streams. Because kernels are statically scheduled and data movement

is explicit, DPU cycle-accuracy can be obtained even at this functional high

level. This is one source of the predictability of the architecture. For

targeting code to the device, the Stream Processor Compiler (SPC) generates the

VLIW executable and pre-processed C code that is compiled/linked via standard

GCC for MIPS. SPC allocates streams in the Lane Register Files and provides

dependency information for the kernel function calls. Software pipelining and

loop unrolling are supported. Branch penalties are avoided by predicated selects

and larger conditionals use conditional streams. Running under Eclipse, the

Target Code Simulator provides comprehensive Host or Device binary code

simulation with breakpoint and single-stepping capabilities with bandwidth and

load statistics. A kernel view shows the VLIW pipeline for kernel optimizations,

and a stream view shows kernel execution and stream loads to review global data

movement for system profiling.

Products

SPI currently markets its Storm-1 family, that includes four fully software programmable DSPs of varying performance levels.

ProductGMACS*Applications
SP16HP-G220224
  • Broadcasting/transcoding
  • Wireless Infrastructure
SP16-G160160
  • Telepresence
  • Surveillance DVRs
SP8-G8080
  • Printers, Scanners and MFPs
  • Surveillance DVRs
SP8LP-G3032
  • Professional camcorder
  • IP Camera

Note: GMACS stands for Giga (billions of) Multiply-Accumulate operations per Second, a common measure of DSP

performance.

Support hardware and software

  • The RapiDev tools suite delivers a fast, predictable path to optimized results, eliminating the complexities of assembly coding or manual cache management
  • The Storm-1 DevKit is a PCI-based software development platform
  • IP Camera Reference Design runs standard Linux 2.6 and supports multiple simultaneous codecs (e.g. H.264, MPEG-4 and MJPEG), arbitrary resolutions, CMOS and CCD sensor processing as well as video analytics in a fully software programmable platform
  • Video Streamer Reference Design supports eight 4CIF input channels of video compressed to H.264 and a Gigabit Ethernet output

References

1. ^EETimes.com - Startup touts stream processing architecture for DSPs
2. ^Data-parallel DSP aimed at cost-sensitive video surveillance apps | Video Imaging DesignLine
3. ^EETimes.com - Stream Processors claims fastest DSP
4. ^ 
5. ^[https://venturebeat.com/2009/05/22/interview-stanfords-bill-dally-leaps-from-academia-to-the-computer-graphics-wars/]
6. ^http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2009/11/02/daily124.html

External links

  • The Imagine Project (Stanford) website
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3 : Fabless semiconductor companies|Electronics companies established in 2004|Companies based in Sunnyvale, California

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