2,859 research outputs found
Energy Saving Techniques for Phase Change Memory (PCM)
In recent years, the energy consumption of computing systems has increased
and a large fraction of this energy is consumed in main memory. Towards this,
researchers have proposed use of non-volatile memory, such as phase change
memory (PCM), which has low read latency and power; and nearly zero leakage
power. However, the write latency and power of PCM are very high and this,
along with limited write endurance of PCM present significant challenges in
enabling wide-spread adoption of PCM. To address this, several
architecture-level techniques have been proposed. In this report, we review
several techniques to manage power consumption of PCM. We also classify these
techniques based on their characteristics to provide insights into them. The
aim of this work is encourage researchers to propose even better techniques for
improving energy efficiency of PCM based main memory.Comment: Survey, phase change RAM (PCRAM
Study and simulation of low rate video coding schemes
The semiannual report is included. Topics covered include communication, information science, data compression, remote sensing, color mapped images, robust coding scheme for packet video, recursively indexed differential pulse code modulation, image compression technique for use on token ring networks, and joint source/channel coder design
Fog-supported delay-constrained energy-saving live migration of VMs over multiPath TCP/IP 5G connections
The incoming era of the fifth-generation fog computing-supported radio access networks (shortly, 5G FOGRANs) aims at exploiting computing/networking resource virtualization, in order to augment the limited resources of wireless devices through the seamless live migration of virtual machines (VMs) toward nearby fog data centers. For this purpose, the bandwidths of the multiple wireless network interface cards of the wireless devices may be aggregated under the control of the emerging MultiPathTCP (MPTCP) protocol. However, due to the fading and mobility-induced phenomena, the energy consumptions of the current state-of-the-art VM migration techniques may still offset their expected benefits. Motivated by these considerations, in this paper, we analytically characterize and implement in software and numerically test the optimal minimum-energy settable-complexity bandwidth manager (SCBM) for the live migration of VMs over 5G FOGRAN MPTCP connections. The key features of the proposed SCBM are that: 1) its implementation complexity is settable on-line on the basis of the target energy consumption versus implementation complexity tradeoff; 2) it minimizes the network energy consumed by the wireless device for sustaining the migration process under hard constraints on the tolerated migration times and downtimes; and 3) by leveraging a suitably designed adaptive mechanism, it is capable to quickly react to (possibly, unpredicted) fading and/or mobility-induced abrupt changes of the wireless environment without requiring forecasting. The actual effectiveness of the proposed SCBM is supported by extensive energy versus delay performance comparisons that cover: 1) a number of heterogeneous 3G/4G/WiFi FOGRAN scenarios; 2) synthetic and real-world workloads; and, 3) MPTCP and wireless connections
The Design of a System Architecture for Mobile Multimedia Computers
This chapter discusses the system architecture of a portable computer, called Mobile Digital Companion, which provides support for handling multimedia applications energy efficiently. Because battery life is limited and battery weight is an important factor for the size and the weight of the Mobile Digital Companion, energy management plays a crucial role in the architecture. As the Companion must remain usable in a variety of environments, it has to be flexible and adaptable to various operating conditions. The Mobile Digital Companion has an unconventional architecture that saves energy by using system decomposition at different levels of the architecture and exploits locality of reference with dedicated, optimised modules. The approach is based on dedicated functionality and the extensive use of energy reduction techniques at all levels of system design. The system has an architecture with a general-purpose processor accompanied by a set of heterogeneous autonomous programmable modules, each providing an energy efficient implementation of dedicated tasks. A reconfigurable internal communication network switch exploits locality of reference and eliminates wasteful data copies
Design of multimedia processor based on metric computation
Media-processing applications, such as signal processing, 2D and 3D graphics
rendering, and image compression, are the dominant workloads in many embedded
systems today. The real-time constraints of those media applications have
taxing demands on today's processor performances with low cost, low power and
reduced design delay. To satisfy those challenges, a fast and efficient
strategy consists in upgrading a low cost general purpose processor core. This
approach is based on the personalization of a general RISC processor core
according the target multimedia application requirements. Thus, if the extra
cost is justified, the general purpose processor GPP core can be enforced with
instruction level coprocessors, coarse grain dedicated hardware, ad hoc
memories or new GPP cores. In this way the final design solution is tailored to
the application requirements. The proposed approach is based on three main
steps: the first one is the analysis of the targeted application using
efficient metrics. The second step is the selection of the appropriate
architecture template according to the first step results and recommendations.
The third step is the architecture generation. This approach is experimented
using various image and video algorithms showing its feasibility
Network-on-Chip -based Multi-Processor System-on-Chip: Towards Mixed-Criticality System Certification
L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen
L2C: Combining Lossy and Lossless Compression on Memory and I/O
In this paper we introduce L2C, a hybrid lossy/lossless compression scheme applicable both to the memory subsystem and I/O traffic of a processor chip. L2C employs general-purpose lossless compression and combines it with state of the art lossy compression to achieve compression ratios up to 16:1 and improve the utilization of chip\u27s bandwidth resources. Compressing memory traffic yields lower memory access time, improving system performance and energy efficiency. Compressing I/O traffic offers several benefits for resource-constrained systems, including more efficient storage and networking.We evaluate L2C as a memory compressor in simulation with a set of approximation-tolerant applications. L2C improves baseline execution time by an average of 50\%, and total system energy consumption by 16%. Compared to the lossy and lossless current state of the art memory compression approaches, L2C improves execution time by 9% and 26% respectively, and reduces system energy costs by 3% and 5%, respectively.I/O compression efficacy is evaluated using a set of real-life datasets. L2C achieves compression ratios of up to 10.4:1 for a single dataset and on average about 4:1, while introducing no more than 0.4% error
A Survey of multimedia streaming in wireless sensor networks: progress, issues and design challenges
Advancements in Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) technology
have enabled Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) to gather, process and transport
multimedia (MM) data as well and not just limited to handling ordinary scalar
data anymore. This new generation of WSN type is called Wireless Multimedia
Sensor Networks (WMSNs). Better and yet relatively cheaper sensors that are
able to sense both scalar data and multimedia data with more advanced
functionalities such as being able to handle rather intense computations easily
have sprung up. In this paper, the applications, architectures, challenges and
issues faced in the design of WMSNs are explored. Security and privacy issues,
over all requirements, proposed and implemented solutions so far, some of the
successful achievements and other related works in the field are also
highlighted. Open research areas are pointed out and a few solution suggestions
to the still persistent problems are made, which, to the best of my knowledge,
so far have not been explored yet
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