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Post-placement pin optimization

2005 
Pin assignment is the process of placing pins on the boundary of a chip or macro during chip design. Problem is that cell placement and pin assignment form a chicken and egg problem: cell placement needs pin positions, while pin positions should be optimally adapted to the placement of cells. The contributions of this paper are threefold. First, the chicken and egg problem is tackled using the observation that pin positions mainly influence cell positions on the periphery of the circuit. A first placement run is used to place the "core" of the circuit followed by adapting pin positions such that wire length of the periphery of the circuit can be optimized. The second contribution is that pin assignment issues that arise in a hierarchical flow, where pins serve as connections between two hierarchical levels, can be incorporated. The final contribution is that the tedious process of manual "fiddling around" with pins in order to reduce congestion is automated through pin constraints set by the designer. Experimental evidence on a large benchmark suite with large designs shows that our method is effective. On average a significant 2.55% reduction in total wire length is achieved. For congested designs, such a reduction can make the difference between routable and not routable. This reduction is due to actual restructuring of the placement, showing the validity of the assumptions. The proposed methods are easily incorporated in common physical design flows.
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