Dynamically scheduled high-level synthesis (HLS) achieves higher throughput than static HLS for codes with unpredictable memory accesses and control flow. However, excessive dataflow scheduling results in circuits that use more resources and have a slower critical path, even when only a part of the circuit exhibits dynamic behavior. Recent work has shown that marking parts of a dataflow circuit for static scheduling can save resources and improve performance (hybrid scheduling), but the dynamic part of the circuit still bottlenecks the critical path. We propose instead to selectively introduce dynamic scheduling into static HLS. This paper presents an algorithm for identifying code regions amenable to dynamic scheduling and shows a methodology for introducing dynamically scheduled basic blocks, loops, and memory operations into static HLS. Our algorithm is informed by modulo-scheduling and can be integrated into any modulo-scheduled HLS tool. On a set of ten benchmarks, we show that our approach achieves on average an up to 3.7$\times$ and 3$\times$ speedup against dynamic and hybrid scheduling, respectively, with an area overhead of 1.3$\times$ and frequency degradation of 0.74$\times$ when compared to static HLS.
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