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DIMPLE: Digital Ising Machines from Programmable Logic, Easily!

Ising machines are very powerful tools for solving optimization problems. There has been a lot of exciting research into ways to build Ising machines in the past few years, with techniques ranging from probabilistic bits using novel materials to coupled ring oscillators. Unfortunately, nearly all of these designs require dedicated mixed-signal hardware. This means that it’s difficult to scale these designs down to advanced process nodes, making it hard for them to compete with conventional digital solvers. It also makes them much more expensive to deploy, as FPGA implementations are impossible.

This project is an attempt to create an entirely digital coupled Ising machine. Instead of using voltage-based coupling, this project leverages a phase-based coupling method where different oscillators control configurable delay cells in each others' oscillation path. Hopefully this can allow us to create an Ising machine that can be deployed on an FPGA, and ultimately manufactured in an advanced process node.

All of the relevant links for DIMPLE are on our master project site, unphased.ai!

How to run Icarus Verilog tests:

Right now, this repo is still very much in a "proof of concept" state. You can build and run the basic coupling testbench by navigating to the rtl/tb directory and running make build and then make test_all. A GTKWave save file is provided to show successful coupling graphically.

There is one testbench provided. The testbench (maxcut.v) successfully solves a 5-node max cut problem! More documentation on how this actually works will be written soon.

How to build for AWS F1 FPGA Instances:

  1. Clone both this repo and the AWS FPGA repo next to one another.
  2. Run the copy_files.sh script to copy the design files from cells to the AWS FPGA project in this repo.
  3. Run the copy_files_aws.sh script to copy the AWS FPGA project from this repo to the AWS FPGA repo. This replaces the cl_hello_world project in the AWS FPGA repo.
  4. Build the modified cl_hello_world project according to the instructions here.
  5. Load the resulting AFI image onto the AWS FPGA.
  6. Build the ising_lib.so C library. From the sw directory, run make and then sudo make install.
  7. You can now run the PyTorch tests in the modified Simulated Bifurcation submodule!

How to help:

There are a handful of TODOs in the codebase, including feature requests and bugs to fix. There are also issues filed here on GitHub -- some of the TODOs and issues line up. If you want to work on these, go ahead! There will be some more formal policies on how contribution works as the project matures.

How it Works

To start off, to understand the theory behind coupled-oscillator Ising machines, I'd highly recommend reading Moy et. al.'s paper in Nature. To get an overview of what an all-to-all coupling architecture looks like, I'd also recommend reading Lo et. al.'s paper in Nature. This README mostly covers how we achieve similar coupling behavior using configurable delay cells, rather than the theory of Ising machines or coupled ring oscillators in general.

Modeling resistive coupling:

The transmission gates in both Moy et. al. and Ho et. al. act as resistors tying nodes in two oscillators together. In this case, stronger coupling means a lower resistance value, and vice versa. We can inspect how these resistors actually affect the behavior of the inverters in the oscillator, to figure out how to replicate it digitally.

Assume we are positively coupling two oscillators, A and B. As shown, node n of oscillator A is at 1V, and node n of oscillator B is at 0V. Because of the resistor tying B[n] to 1V, B[n] rises from 0 to 1 faster than a non-coupled node of the circuit might (in this diagram, B[n-1]). If A[n] was 0, the resistor would instead slow the rise time of B[n].

An oscillator labeled A coupled to an oscillator labeled B using a resistor. Positive coupling causes the rising egde of B to rise faster when it matches A.

We observe that when oscillators A and B are positively coupled, incoming signals that will cause the oscillators to go into a matched state are sped up by the resistor, incoming signals that will cause the oscillators to go into a mismatched state are slowed down.

The same principle works for negative coupling, except in reverse. When oscillators A and B are negatively coupled, incoming signals that will cause the oscillators to go into a matched state are slowed down by the resistor, and incoming signals that will cause the oscillators to go into a mismatched state are sped up.

A Better Way: Phase Coupling

As it turns out, we can achieve similar behavior without using resistors at all! Instead, we can use configurable delay cells. Instead, we use an XOR gate to determine whether or not the incoming signal is matched or mismatched. Then, we use a digitally programmable delay to change the delay path oscillator B is traveling through based on whether or not it matches with A. In the case shown, B is rising to match A, so its delay is reduced, essentially shifting B's phase forward to get closer to matching A's phase.

An oscilaltor labeled A coupled to an oscillator labeled B using a configurable delay cell. Positive coupling causes the rising egde of B to rise faster when it matches A.

In this case, stronger coupling means that the change in delay between a sped-up and slowed-down path is larger. The design in coupled_cell.v is parameterizable to support different possible ranges of coupling weights.

Major open questions

One important part of this system that I haven't thought about at all is how to actually write software to leverage this design. Once the core is done, it could theoretically be deployed at scale on FPGAs easily. What could we do with that? Feel free to reach out if you have any good ideas!

I'm @blip_tm on twitter, and my email is zachbela@alumni.stanford.edu.