Automatic Domain-Specific SoC Design for Autonomous Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Citation:

Srivatsan Krishnan, Zishen Wan, Kshitij Bhardwaj, Paul Whatmough, Aleksandra Faust, Sabrina M. Neuman, Gu-Yeon Wei, David Brooks, and Vijay Janapa Reddi. 2022. “Automatic Domain-Specific SoC Design for Autonomous Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.” In 2022 55th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture (MICRO). [IEEE Micro Top Picks 2023 Honorable Mention]: IEEE. Full Text
Automatic Domain-Specific SoC Design for Autonomous Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

Abstract:

Building domain-specific accelerators is becoming increasingly paramount to meet the high-performance requirements under stringent power and real-time constraints. However, emerging application domains like autonomous vehicles are complex systems, where the constraints extend beyond just the computing stack. Manually selecting and navigating the design space to design custom and efficient domain-specific SoCs (DSSoC) is tedious and expensive. As such, there is a need for automated DSSoC design methodologies. In this paper, we use agile and autonomous UAVs as a case study for understanding how to automate the design of domain-specific SoCs for autonomous vehicles. Architecting a UAV DSSoC requires considering parameters such as sensor rate, compute throughput, and other physical characteristics (e.g., payload weight, thrust-to-weight ratio) that affect overall performance. Iterating over the many component choices results in a combinatorial explosion of the number of possible combinations: from 10s of thousands to billions, depending on implementation details. To navigate the DSSoC design space efficiently, we introduce AutoPilot, a framework that automates full-system UAV co-design. AutoPilot uses machine learning to navigate the large DSSoC design space and automatically select a combination of autonomy algorithm and hardware accelerator while considering the cross-product effect across different UAV components. AutoPilot consistently outperforms general-purpose hardware selections like Xavier NX and Jetson TX2, as well as dedicated hardware accelerators built for autonomous UAVs. DSSoC designs generated by AutoPilot increase the number of missions on average by up to 2.25x, 1.62x, and 1.43x for nano, micro, and mini-UAVs, respectively, over baselines. We also discuss how AutoPilot can be extended to other closely related autonomous vehicles.

Last updated on 01/23/2023