Merging Loops - 2023.1 English

Vitis High-Level Synthesis User Guide (UG1399)

Document ID
UG1399
Release Date
2023-07-17
Version
2023.1 English

All rolled loops imply and create at least one state in the design FSM. When there are multiple sequential loops it can create additional unnecessary clock cycles and prevent further optimizations.

The following figure shows a simple example where a seemingly intuitive coding style has a negative impact on the performance of the RTL design.

Figure 1. Loop Directives

In the preceding figure, (A) shows how, by default, each rolled loop in the design creates at least one state in the FSM. Moving between those states costs clock cycles: assuming each loop iteration requires one clock cycle, it takes a total of 11 cycles to execute both loops:

  • 1 clock cycle to enter the ADD loop.
  • 4 clock cycles to execute the add loop.
  • 1 clock cycle to exit ADD and enter SUB.
  • 4 clock cycles to execute the SUB loop.
  • 1 clock cycle to exit the SUB loop.
  • For a total of 11 clock cycles.

In this simple example, it is obvious that an else branch in the ADD loop would also solve the issue but in a more complex example it may be less obvious and the more intuitive coding style may have greater advantages.

The LOOP_MERGE optimization directive is used to automatically merge loops. The loop merge optimization directive will seek to merge all loops within the scope it is placed. In the above example, merging the loops creates a control structure similar to that shown in (B) in the preceding figure, which requires only 6 clocks to complete.

Merging loops allows the logic within the loops to be optimized together. The loop merging transformation has limitations and may not always succeed. However, it is still possible to manually merge the loops by refactoring the code. In the example above, using a dual-port block RAM allows the add and subtraction operations to be performed in parallel.