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1. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Reference Manual
2. Compiler
3. C Language and Library Support
4. Component Interfaces
5. Component Memories (Memory Attributes)
6. Loops in Components
7. Component Concurrency
8. Arbitrary Precision Math Support
9. Component Target Frequency
10. Systems of Tasks
11. Libraries
12. Advanced Hardware Synthesis Controls
13. Intel® High Level Synthesis Compiler Pro Edition Reference Summary
A. Advanced Math Source Code Libraries
B. Supported Math Functions
C. Cyclone® V Restrictions
D. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Reference Manual Archives
E. Document Revision History of the Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Reference Manual
6.1. Loop Initiation Interval (ii Pragma)
6.2. Loop-Carried Dependencies (ivdep Pragma)
6.3. Loop Coalescing (loop_coalesce Pragma)
6.4. Loop Unrolling (unroll Pragma)
6.5. Loop Concurrency (max_concurrency Pragma)
6.6. Loop Iteration Speculation (speculated_iterations Pragma)
6.7. Loop Pipelining Control (disable_loop_pipelining Pragma)
6.8. Loop Interleaving Control (max_interleaving Pragma)
6.9. Loop Fusion
11.4.1.1. Integration of an RTL Module into the HLS Pipeline
11.4.1.2. RTL Module Interfaces
11.4.1.3. RTL Reset and Clock Signals
11.4.1.4. Object Manifest File Syntax
11.4.1.5. Mapping HLS Data Types to RTL Signals
11.4.1.6. HLS Emulation Models for RTL-Based Functions
11.4.1.7. Potential Incompatibility between RTL Modules and Partial Reconfiguration
11.4.1.8. Stall-Free RTL
11.4.1.9. RTL Module Restrictions and Limitations for HLS Libraries
13.1. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition i++ Command-Line Arguments
13.2. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Header Files
13.3. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Compiler-Defined Preprocessor Macros
13.4. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Keywords
13.5. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Simulation API (Testbench Only)
13.6. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Component Memory Attributes
13.7. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Loop Pragmas
13.8. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Scope Pragmas
13.9. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Component Attributes
13.10. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Component Default Interfaces
13.11. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Component Invocation Interface Control Attributes
13.12. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Component Macros
13.13. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Systems of Tasks API
13.14. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Pipes API
13.15. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Streaming Input Interfaces
13.16. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Streaming Output Interfaces
13.17. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Memory-Mapped Interfaces
13.18. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Load-Store Unit Control
13.19. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Arbitrary Precision Data Types
B.1. Math Functions Provided by the math.h Header File
B.2. Math Functions Provided by the extendedmath.h Header File
B.3. Math Functions Provided by the ac_fixed_math.h Header File
B.4. Math Functions Provided by the hls_float.h Header File
B.5. Math Functions Provided by the hls_float_math.h Header File
B.6. Default Rounding Schemes and Subnormal Number Support
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6.5. Loop Concurrency (max_concurrency Pragma)
You can use the max_concurrency pragma to increase or limit the concurrency of a loop in your component. The concurrency of a loop is how many iterations of that loop can be in progress at one time. By default, the Intel® HLS Compiler tries to maximize the concurrency of loops so that your component runs at peak throughput.
To achieve maximum concurrency in loops, sometimes private copies of component memory have to be created to break dependencies on the underlying hardware that prevent the loop from being fully pipelined.
You can see the number of private copies created for you component memories in the High-Level Design reports (report.html) for your component:
- In the Details pane of the Loop Analysis report as a message that says that the maximum number of simultaneous executions has been limited to N.
- In the Bank view of your component memory in the Function Memory Viewer, which graphically shows the number of private copies.
If you want to exchange some performance for component memory savings, apply #pragma max_concurrency <N> to the loop. When you apply this pragma, the number of private copies changes and controls the number of iterations entering the loop, as shown in the following example:
#pragma max_concurrency 1 for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) { int arr[M]; // Doing work on arr }
You can control the number of private copies created for a component memory accessed withing a loop by using the hls_private_copies memory attribute. For details, see hls_private_copies Memory Attribute. For an example of increasing the number of private copies of memory, refer to the following tutorial:
<quartus_installdir>/hls/examples/tutorials/component_memories/non_power_of_two_memory
You can also control the concurrency of your component by using the hls_max_concurrency component attribute. For more information about the hls_max_concurrency(N) component attribute, see Concurrency Control (hls_max_concurrency Attribute). For an example increasing concurrency for better throughput, refer to the following tutorial:
<quartus_installdir>/hls/examples/tutorials/best_practices/optimize_ii_using_hls_register