Intel® High Level Synthesis Compiler Pro Edition: Best Practices Guide
ID
683152
Date
6/26/2023
Public
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1. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Best Practices Guide
2. Best Practices for Coding and Compiling Your Component
3. FPGA Concepts
4. Interface Best Practices
5. Loop Best Practices
6. fMAX Bottleneck Best Practices
7. Memory Architecture Best Practices
8. System of Tasks Best Practices
9. Datatype Best Practices
10. Advanced Troubleshooting
A. Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Best Practices Guide Archives
B. Document Revision History for Intel® HLS Compiler Pro Edition Best Practices Guide
5.1. Reuse Hardware By Calling It In a Loop
5.2. Parallelize Loops
5.3. Construct Well-Formed Loops
5.4. Minimize Loop-Carried Dependencies
5.5. Avoid Complex Loop-Exit Conditions
5.6. Convert Nested Loops into a Single Loop
5.7. Place if-Statements in the Lowest Possible Scope in a Loop Nest
5.8. Declare Variables in the Deepest Scope Possible
5.9. Raise Loop II to Increase fMAX
5.10. Control Loop Interleaving
3.1.1.2. Register
A register is the most basic storage element in an FPGA. It has an input (in), an output (out), and a clock signal (clk). It is synchronous, that is, it synchronizes output changes to a clock. In an ALM, a register may store the output of the LUT.
The following figure illustrates a register:
Note: The clock signal is implied and not shown in some figures.
The following figure illustrates the waveform of register signals:
The input data propagates to the output on every clock cycle. The output remains unchanged between clock cycles.