CSE598/494 System-Level Hardware-Software Codesign
From esoterum.org
Contents
Paper Presentation
- > (2.1) D.C. Pham, T. Aipperspach, D. Boerstler, M. Bolliger, R. Chaudhry, D. Cox, P. Harvey, P.M. Harvey, H.P. Hofstee, C. Johns, J. Kahle, A. Kameyama, J. Keaty, Y. Masubuchi, M. Pham, J. Pille, S. Posluszny, M. Riley, D.L. Stasiak, M. Suzuoki, O. Takahashi, J. Warnock, S. Weitzel, D. Wendel, K. Yazawa, "Overview of the architecture, circuit design, and physical implementation of a first-generation cell processor", Technol. Group, IBM Syst., Austin, TX, USA, IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, Volume: 41 , Issue: 1, pp. 179-196, Jan. 2006 (originally forwarded by Dr. Chatha)
- David A. Bader, Virat Agarwal, BFFTC: Fastest Fourier Transform for the IBM Cell Broadband Engine, HiPC, 2007, pp. 172-184
JPEG
- Gregory K. Wallace, "The JPEG Still Picture Compression Standard", IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics, 1991
- The Data Compression Book at ASU Library
- JPEG article on nationmaster.com encyclopedia
Xilinx
Project 2
Here is an example of using `fmemopen' to create a stream for
reading from a string:
#include <stdio.h>
static char buffer[] = "foobar";
int
main (void)
{
int ch;
FILE *stream;
stream = fmemopen (buffer, strlen (buffer), "r");
while ((ch = fgetc (stream)) != EOF)
printf ("Got %c\n", ch);
fclose (stream);
return 0;
}
This program produces the following output:
Got f
Got o
Got o
Got b
Got a
Got r