The SDSoC Environment
The SDSoC™ (software-defined system-on-chip) environment is a tool suite that includes an Eclipse-based integrated development environment (IDE) for implementing heterogeneous embedded systems using the Zynq®-7000 All Programmable SoC platform and Zynq UltraScale+™ MPSoC. The SDSoC environment also includes system compilers that transform C/C++ programs into complete hardware/software systems with select functions compiled into programmable logic.
The SDSoC system compilers analyze a program to determine the data flow between software and hardware functions, and generate an application specific system-on-chip to realize the program. To achieve high performance, each hardware function runs as an independent thread; the system compilers generate hardware and software components that ensure synchronization between hardware and software threads, while enabling pipelined computation and communication. Application code can involve many hardware functions, multiple instances of a specific hardware function, and calls to a hardware function from different parts of the program.
The SDSoC IDE supports software development workflows including profiling, compilation, linking, system performance analysis, and debugging. In addition, the SDSoC environment provides a fast performance estimation capability to enable "what if" exploration of the hardware/software interface before committing to a full hardware compile.
The SDSoC system compilers target a base platform and invoke the Vivado® High-Level Synthesis (HLS) tool to compile synthesizeable C/C++ functions into programmable logic. They then generate a complete hardware system, including DMAs, interconnects, hardware buffers, and other IPs, and an FPGA bitstream by invoking the Vivado Design Suite tools. To ensure all hardware function calls preserve their original behavior, the SDSoC system compilers generate system-specific software stubs and configuration data. The program includes function calls to drivers required to use the generated IP blocks. Application and generated software is compiled and linked using a standard GNU toolchain.
By generating complete applications from “single source”, the system compilers allow you to iterate over design and architecture changes by refactoring at the program level, dramatically reducing the time needed to achieve working programs running on the target platform.