9,990 research outputs found
Fuzzy memoization for floating-point multimedia applications
Instruction memoization is a promising technique to reduce the power consumption and increase the performance of future low-end/mobile multimedia systems. Power and performance efficiency can be improved by reusing instances of an already executed operation. Unfortunately, this technique may not always be worth the effort due to the power consumption and area impact of the tables required to leverage an adequate level of reuse. In this paper, we introduce and evaluate a novel way of understanding multimedia floating-point operations based on the fuzzy computation paradigm: performance and power consumption can be improved at the cost of small precision losses in computation. By exploiting this implicit characteristic of multimedia applications, we propose a new technique called tolerant memoization. This technique expands the capabilities of classic memoization by associating entries with similar inputs to the same output. We evaluate this new technique by measuring the effect of tolerant memoization for floating-point operations in a low-power multimedia processor and discuss the trade-offs between performance and quality of the media outputs. We report energy improvements of 12 percent for a set of key multimedia applications with small LUT of 6 Kbytes, compared to 3 percent obtained using previously proposed techniques.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Avoiding core's DUE & SDC via acoustic wave detectors and tailored error containment and recovery
The trend of downsizing transistors and operating voltage scaling has made the processor chip more sensitive against radiation phenomena making soft errors an important challenge. New reliability techniques for handling soft errors in the logic and memories that allow meeting the desired failures-in-time (FIT) target are key to keep harnessing the benefits of Moore's law. The failure to scale the soft error rate caused by particle strikes, may soon limit the total number of cores that one may have running at the same time. This paper proposes a light-weight and scalable architecture to eliminate silent data corruption errors (SDC) and detected unrecoverable errors (DUE) of a core. The architecture uses acoustic wave detectors for error detection. We propose to recover by confining the errors in the cache hierarchy, allowing us to deal with the relatively long detection latencies. Our results show that the proposed mechanism protects the whole core (logic, latches and memory arrays) incurring performance overhead as low as 0.60%. © 2014 IEEE.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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Fault tolerance in super-scalar and VLIW processors
In this paper, we present a method for utilizing the spare capacity in super-scalar and very long instruction word (VLIW) processors to tolerate functional unit failures. Unlike previous work that was primarily interested in detection of transient faults, we are concerned with more permanent and/or intermittent faults which necessitate processor reconfiguration. Our method utilizes the VLIW compiler or the superscalar scheduler to insert redundant operations whenever idle functional units exist. The results of these redundant operations are used to detect and diagnose functional unit failures. For super-scalar processors, the scheduler can then utilize this information to ensure that operations are performed only on non-faulty units. In VLIW processors, this is equivalent to recompiling the code to run on the remaining non-faulty functional units. Since in certain applications, recompilation may not be possible, we consider two alternative reconfiguration strategies for VLIW processors. These strategies sacrifice storage space and execution time, respectively, in order to reconfigure without recompiling. We present Markov models that describe the behavior of processors using these different approaches and we evaluate their reliabilities. The results show that, while super-scalar and VLIW with recompilation provide the highest reliability, all proposed strategies significantly increase reliability over that of an unprotected processor
Total order broadcast for fault tolerant exascale systems
In the process of designing a new fault tolerant run-time for future exascale systems, we discovered that a total order broadcast would be necessary. That is, nodes of a supercomputer should be able to broadcast messages to other nodes even in the face of failures. All messages should be seen in the same order at all nodes.
While this is a well studied problem in distributed systems, few researchers have looked at how to perform total order broadcasts at large scales for data availability. Our experience implementing a published total order broadcast algorithm showed poor scalability at tens of nodes. In this paper we present a novel algorithm for total order broadcast which scales logarithmically in the number of processes and is not delayed by most process failures.
While we are motivated by the needs of our run-time we believe this primitive is of general applicability. Total order broadcasts are used often in datacenter environments and as HPC developers begins to address fault tolerance at the application level we believe they will need similar primitives
Performance modeling of fault-tolerant circuit-switched communication networks
Circuit switching (CS) has been suggested as an efficient switching method for supporting simultaneous communications (such as data, voice, and images) across parallel systems due to its ability to preserve both communication performance and fault-tolerant demands in such systems. In this paper we present an efficient scheme to capture the mean message latency in 2D torus with CS in the presence of faulty components. We have also conducted extensive simulation experiments, the results of which are used to validate the analytical mode
Control-flow checking via regular expressions
The present paper explains a new approach to program control flow checking. The check has been inserted at source-code level using a signature methodology based on regular expressions. The signature checking is performed without a dedicated watchdog processor but resorting to inter-process communication (IPC) facilities offered by most of the modern operating systems. The proposed approach allows very low memory overhead and trade-off between fault latency and program execution time overhead
Modeling and measurement of fault-tolerant multiprocessors
The workload effects on computer performance are addressed first for a highly reliable unibus multiprocessor used in real-time control. As an approach to studing these effects, a modified Stochastic Petri Net (SPN) is used to describe the synchronous operation of the multiprocessor system. From this model the vital components affecting performance can be determined. However, because of the complexity in solving the modified SPN, a simpler model, i.e., a closed priority queuing network, is constructed that represents the same critical aspects. The use of this model for a specific application requires the partitioning of the workload into job classes. It is shown that the steady state solution of the queuing model directly produces useful results. The use of this model in evaluating an existing system, the Fault Tolerant Multiprocessor (FTMP) at the NASA AIRLAB, is outlined with some experimental results. Also addressed is the technique of measuring fault latency, an important microscopic system parameter. Most related works have assumed no or a negligible fault latency and then performed approximate analyses. To eliminate this deficiency, a new methodology for indirectly measuring fault latency is presented
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