103 research outputs found

    Performance study of synthetic AER generation on CPUs for Real-Time Video based on Spikes

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    Address-Event-Representation (AER) is a neuromorphic interchip communication protocol that allows for real-time virtual massive connectivity between huge number neurons located on different chips. When building multi-chip muti-layered AER systems it is absolutely necessary to have a computer interface that allows (a) to read AER interchip traffic into the computer and visualize it on screen, and (b) convert conventional frame-based video stream in the computer into AER and inject it at some point of the AER structure. This is necessary for test and debugging of complex AER systems. Previous work presented several software methods for converting digital frames into AER format. Those methods were not feasible for real-time conversion those days because the processor performance was insufficient. Nowadays, Multi-core processor architectures and cache hierarchies have evolved and the performance is much better than Pentium 4 Mobile of those years. In this paper we study frame-to-AER methods for realtime video applications (40ms per frame) using modern processor architectures, compilers, and processors oriented for stand-alone applications (mini-PC processors

    Energy and Reliability in Future NOC Interconnected CMPS

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    In this dissertation, I explore energy and reliability in future NoC (Network-on-Chip) interconnected CMPs (chip multiprocessors) as they have become a first-order constraint in future CMP design. In the first part, we target the root cause of network energy consumption through techniques that reduce link and router-level switching activity. We specifically focus on memory subsystem traffic, as it comprises the bulk of NoC load in a CMP. By transmitting only the flits that contain words that we predicted would be useful using a novel spatial locality predictor, our scheme seeks to reduce network activity. We aim to further lower NoC energy consumption through microarchitectural mechanisms that inhibit datapath switching activity caused by unused words in individual flits. Using simulation-based performance studies and detailed energy models based on synthesized router designs and different link wire types, we show that (a) the pre- diction mechanism achieves very high accuracy, with an average rate of false-unused prediction of just 2.5%; (b) the combined NoC energy savings enabled by the predictor and microarchitectural support are 36% on average and up to 57% in the best case; and (c) there is no system performance penalty as a result of this technique. In the second part, we present a method for dynamic voltage/frequency scaling of networks-on-chip and last level caches in CMP designs, where the shared resources form a single voltage/frequency domain. We develop a new technique for monitoring and control and validate it by running PARSEC benchmarks through full system simulations. These techniques reduce energy-delay product by 46% compared to a state-of-the-art prior work. In the third part, we develop critical path models for HCI- and NBTI-induced wear assuming stress caused under realistic workload conditions, and apply them onto the interconnect microarchitecture. A key finding from this modeling is that, counter to prevailing wisdom, wearout in the CMP on-chip interconnect is correlated with a lack of load observed in the NoC routers, rather than high load. We then develop a novel wearout-decelerating scheme in which routers under low load have their wearout-sensitive components exercised without significantly impacting the router’s cycle time, pipeline depth, and area or power consumption. We subsequently show that the proposed design yields a 13.8∼65× increase in CMP lifetime

    Microarchitectural Low-Power Design Techniques for Embedded Microprocessors

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    With the omnipresence of embedded processing in all forms of electronics today, there is a strong trend towards wireless, battery-powered, portable embedded systems which have to operate under stringent energy constraints. Consequently, low power consumption and high energy efficiency have emerged as the two key criteria for embedded microprocessor design. In this thesis we present a range of microarchitectural low-power design techniques which enable the increase of performance for embedded microprocessors and/or the reduction of energy consumption, e.g., through voltage scaling. In the context of cryptographic applications, we explore the effectiveness of instruction set extensions (ISEs) for a range of different cryptographic hash functions (SHA-3 candidates) on a 16-bit microcontroller architecture (PIC24). Specifically, we demonstrate the effectiveness of light-weight ISEs based on lookup table integration and microcoded instructions using finite state machines for operand and address generation. On-node processing in autonomous wireless sensor node devices requires deeply embedded cores with extremely low power consumption. To address this need, we present TamaRISC, a custom-designed ISA with a corresponding ultra-low-power microarchitecture implementation. The TamaRISC architecture is employed in conjunction with an ISE and standard cell memories to design a sub-threshold capable processor system targeted at compressed sensing applications. We furthermore employ TamaRISC in a hybrid SIMD/MIMD multi-core architecture targeted at moderate to high processing requirements (> 1 MOPS). A range of different microarchitectural techniques for efficient memory organization are presented. Specifically, we introduce a configurable data memory mapping technique for private and shared access, as well as instruction broadcast together with synchronized code execution based on checkpointing. We then study an inherent suboptimality due to the worst-case design principle in synchronous circuits, and introduce the concept of dynamic timing margins. We show that dynamic timing margins exist in microprocessor circuits, and that these margins are to a large extent state-dependent and that they are correlated to the sequences of instruction types which are executed within the processor pipeline. To perform this analysis we propose a circuit/processor characterization flow and tool called dynamic timing analysis. Moreover, this flow is employed in order to devise a high-level instruction set simulation environment for impact-evaluation of timing errors on application performance. The presented approach improves the state of the art significantly in terms of simulation accuracy through the use of statistical fault injection. The dynamic timing margins in microprocessors are then systematically exploited for throughput improvements or energy reductions via our proposed instruction-based dynamic clock adjustment (DCA) technique. To this end, we introduce a 6-stage 32-bit microprocessor with cycle-by-cycle DCA. Besides a comprehensive design flow and simulation environment for evaluation of the DCA approach, we additionally present a silicon prototype of a DCA-enabled OpenRISC microarchitecture fabricated in 28 nm FD-SOI CMOS. The test chip includes a suitable clock generation unit which allows for cycle-by-cycle DCA over a wide range with fine granularity at frequencies exceeding 1 GHz. Measurement results of speedups and power reductions are provided

    Towards an embedded board-level tester: study of a configurable test processor

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    The demand for electronic systems with more features, higher performance, and less power consumption increases continuously. This is a real challenge for design and test engineers because they have to deal with electronic systems with ever-increasing complexity maintaining production and test costs low and meeting critical time to market deadlines. For a test engineer working at the board-level, this means that manufacturing defects must be detected as soon as possible and at a low cost. However, the use of classical test techniques for testing modern printed circuit boards is not sufficient, and in the worst case these techniques cannot be used at all. This is mainly due to modern packaging technologies, a high device density, and high operation frequencies of modern printed circuit boards. This leads to very long test times, low fault coverage, and high test costs. This dissertation addresses these issues and proposes an FPGA-based test approach for printed circuit boards. The concept is based on a configurable test processor that is temporarily implemented in the on-board FPGA and provides the corresponding mechanisms to communicate to external test equipment and co-processors implemented in the FPGA. This embedded test approach provides the flexibility to implement test functions either in the external test equipment or in the FPGA. In this manner, tests are executed at-speed increasing the fault coverage, test times are reduced, and the test system can be adapted automatically to the properties of the FPGA and devices located on the board. An essential part of the FPGA-based test approach deals with the development of a test processor. In this dissertation the required properties of the processor are discussed, and it is shown that the adaptation to the specific test scenario plays a very important role for the optimization. For this purpose, the test processor is equipped with configuration parameters at the instruction set architecture and microarchitecture level. Additionally, an automatic generation process for the test system and for the computation of some of the processor’s configuration parameters is proposed. The automatic generation process uses as input a model known as the device under test model (DUT-M). In order to evaluate the entire FPGA-based test approach and the viability of a processor for testing printed circuit boards, the developed test system is used to test interconnections to two different devices: a static random memory (SRAM) and a liquid crystal display (LCD). Experiments were conducted in order to determine the resource utilization of the processor and FPGA-based test system and to measure test time when different test functions are implemented in the external test equipment or the FPGA. It has been shown that the introduced approach is suitable to test printed circuit boards and that the test processor represents a realistic alternative for testing at board-level.Der Bedarf an elektronischen Systemen mit zusätzlichen Merkmalen, höherer Leistung und geringerem Energieverbrauch nimmt ständig zu. Dies stellt eine erhebliche Herausforderung für Entwicklungs- und Testingenieure dar, weil sie sich mit elektronischen Systemen mit einer steigenden Komplexität zu befassen haben. Außerdem müssen die Herstellungs- und Testkosten gering bleiben und die Produkteinführungsfristen so kurz wie möglich gehalten werden. Daraus folgt, dass ein Testingenieur, der auf Leiterplatten-Ebene arbeitet, die Herstellungsfehler so früh wie möglich entdecken und dabei möglichst niedrige Kosten verursachen soll. Allerdings sind die klassischen Testmethoden nicht in der Lage, die Anforderungen von modernen Leiterplatten zu erfüllen und im schlimmsten Fall können diese Testmethoden überhaupt nicht verwendet werden. Dies liegt vor allem an modernen Gehäuse-Technologien, der hohen Bauteildichte und den hohen Arbeitsfrequenzen von modernen Leiterplatten. Das führt zu sehr langen Testzeiten, geringer Testabdeckung und hohen Testkosten. Die Dissertation greift diese Problematik auf und liefert einen FPGA-basierten Testansatz für Leiterplatten. Das Konzept beruht auf einem konfigurierbaren Testprozessor, welcher im On-Board-FPGA temporär implementiert wird und die entsprechenden Mechanismen für die Kommunikation mit der externen Testeinrichtung und Co-Prozessoren im FPGA bereitstellt. Dadurch ist es möglich Testfunktionen flexibel entweder auf der externen Testeinrichtung oder auf dem FPGA zu implementieren. Auf diese Weise werden Tests at-speed ausgeführt, um die Testabdeckung zu erhöhen. Außerdem wird die Testzeit verkürzt und das Testsystem automatisch an die Eigenschaften des FPGAs und anderer Bauteile auf der Leiterplatte angepasst. Ein wesentlicher Teil des FPGA-basierten Testansatzes umfasst die Entwicklung eines Testprozessors. In dieser Dissertation wird über die benötigten Eigenschaften des Prozessors diskutiert und es wird gezeigt, dass die Anpassung des Prozessors an den spezifischen Testfall von großer Bedeutung für die Optimierung ist. Zu diesem Zweck wird der Prozessor mit Konfigurationsparametern auf der Befehlssatzarchitektur-Ebene und Mikroarchitektur-Ebene ausgerüstet. Außerdem wird ein automatischer Generierungsprozess für die Realisierung des Testsystems und für die Berechnung einer Untergruppe von Konfigurationsparametern des Prozessors vorgestellt. Der automatische Generierungsprozess benutzt als Eingangsinformation ein Modell des Prüflings (device under test model, DUT-M). Das entwickelte Testsystem wurde zum Testen von Leiterplatten für Verbindungen zwischen dem FPGA und zwei Bauteilen verwendet, um den FPGA-basierten Testansatz und die Durchführbarkeit des Testprozessors für das Testen auf Leiterplatte-Ebene zu evaluieren. Die zwei Bauteile sind ein Speicher mit direktem Zugriff (static random-access memory, SRAM) und eine Flüssigkristallanzeige (liquid crystal display, LCD). Die Experimente wurden durchgeführt, um den Ressourcenverbrauch des Prozessors und Testsystems festzustellen und um die Testzeit zu messen. Dies geschah durch die Implementierung von unterschiedlichen Testfunktionen auf der externen Testeinrichtung und dem FPGA. Dadurch konnte gezeigt werden, dass der FPGA-basierte Ansatz für das Testen von Leiterplatten geeignet ist und dass der Testprozessor eine realistische Alternative für das Testen auf Leiterplatten-Ebene ist

    Methodologies for Accelerated Analysis of the Reliability and the Energy Efficiency Levels of Modern Microprocessor Architectures

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    Η εξέλιξη της τεχνολογίας ημιαγωγών, της αρχιτεκτονικής υπολογιστών και της σχεδίασης οδηγεί σε αύξηση της απόδοσης των σύγχρονων μικροεπεξεργαστών, η οποία επίσης συνοδεύεται από αύξηση της ευπάθειας των προϊόντων. Οι σχεδιαστές εφαρμόζουν διάφορες τεχνικές κατά τη διάρκεια της ζωής των ολοκληρωμένων κυκλωμάτων με σκοπό να διασφαλίσουν τα υψηλά επίπεδα αξιοπιστίας των παραγόμενων προϊόντων και να τα προστατέψουν από διάφορες κατηγορίες σφαλμάτων διασφαλίζοντας την ορθή λειτουργία τους. Αυτή η διδακτορική διατριβή προτείνει καινούριες μεθόδους για να διασφαλίσει τα υψηλά επίπεδα αξιοπιστίας και ενεργειακής απόδοσης των σύγχρονων μικροεπεξεργαστών οι οποίες μπορούν να εφαρμοστούν κατά τη διάρκεια του πρώιμου σχεδιαστικού σταδίου, του σταδίου παραγωγής ή του σταδίου της κυκλοφορίας των ολοκληρωμένων κυκλωμάτων στην αγορά. Οι συνεισφορές αυτής της διατριβής μπορούν να ομαδοποιηθούν στις ακόλουθες δύο κατηγορίες σύμφωνα με το στάδιο της ζωής των μικροεπεξεργαστών στο οποίο εφαρμόζονται: • Πρώιμο σχεδιαστικό στάδιο: Η στατιστική εισαγωγή σφαλμάτων σε δομές που είναι μοντελοποιημένες σε προσομοιωτές οι οποίοι στοχεύουν στην μελέτη της απόδοσης είναι μια επιστημονικά καθιερωμένη μέθοδος για την ακριβή μέτρηση της αξιοπιστίας, αλλά υστερεί στον αργό χρόνο εκτέλεσης. Σε αυτή τη διατριβή, αρχικά παρουσιάζουμε ένα νέο πλήρως αυτοματοποιημένο εργαλείο εισαγωγής σφαλμάτων σε μικροαρχιτεκτονικό επίπεδο που στοχεύει στην ακριβή αξιολόγηση της αξιοπιστίας ενός μεγάλου πλήθους μονάδων υλικού σε σχέση με διάφορα μοντέλα σφαλμάτων (παροδικά, διακοπτόμενα, μόνιμα σφάλματα). Στη συνέχεια, χρησιμοποιώντας το ίδιο εργαλείο και στοχεύοντας τα παροδικά σφάλματα, παρουσιάζουμε διάφορες μελέτες σχετιζόμενες με την αξιοπιστία και την απόδοση, οι οποίες μπορούν να βοηθήσουν τις σχεδιαστικές αποφάσεις στα πρώιμα στάδια της ζωής των επεξεργαστών. Τελικά, προτείνουμε δύο μεθοδολογίες για να επιταχύνουμε τα μαζικά πειράματα στατιστικής εισαγωγής σφαλμάτων. Στην πρώτη, επιταχύνουμε τα πειράματα έπειτα από την πραγματική εισαγωγή των σφαλμάτων στις δομές του υλικού. Στη δεύτερη, επιταχύνουμε ακόμη περισσότερο τα πειράματα προτείνοντας τη μεθοδολογία με όνομα MeRLiN, η οποία βασίζεται στη μείωση της αρχικής λίστας σφαλμάτων μέσω της ομαδοποίησής τους σε ισοδύναμες ομάδες έπειτα από κατηγοριοποίηση σύμφωνα με την εντολή που τελικά προσπελαύνει τη δομή που φέρει το σφάλμα. • Παραγωγικό στάδιο και στάδιο κυκλοφορίας στην αγορά: Οι συνεισφορές αυτής της διδακτορικής διατριβής σε αυτά τα στάδια της ζωής των μικροεπεξεργαστών καλύπτουν δύο σημαντικά επιστημονικά πεδία. Αρχικά, χρησιμοποιώντας το ολοκληρωμένο κύκλωμα των 48 πυρήνων με ονομασία Intel SCC, προτείνουμε μια τεχνική επιτάχυνσης του εντοπισμού μονίμων σφαλμάτων που εφαρμόζεται κατά τη διάρκεια λειτουργίας αρχιτεκτονικών με πολλούς πυρήνες, η οποία εκμεταλλεύεται το δίκτυο υψηλής ταχύτητας μεταφοράς μηνυμάτων που διατίθεται στα ολοκληρωμένα κυκλώματα αυτού του είδους. Δεύτερον, προτείνουμε μια λεπτομερή στατιστική μεθοδολογία με σκοπό την ακριβή πρόβλεψη σε επίπεδο συστήματος των ασφαλών ορίων λειτουργίας της τάσης των πυρήνων τύπου ARMv8 που βρίσκονται πάνω στη CPU X-Gene 2.The evolution in semiconductor manufacturing technology, computer architecture and design leads to increase in performance of modern microprocessors, which is also accompanied by increase in products’ vulnerability to errors. Designers apply different techniques throughout microprocessors life-time in order to ensure the high reliability requirements of the delivered products that are defined as their ability to avoid service failures that are more frequent and more severe than is acceptable. This thesis proposes novel methods to guarantee the high reliability and energy efficiency requirements of modern microprocessors that can be applied during the early design phase, the manufacturing phase or after the chips release to the market. The contributions of this thesis can be grouped in the two following categories according to the phase of the CPUs lifecycle that are applied at: • Early design phase: Statistical fault injection using microarchitectural structures modeled in performance simulators is a state-of-the-art method to accurately measure the reliability, but suffers from low simulation throughput. In this thesis, we firstly present a novel fully-automated versatile microarchitecture-level fault injection framework (called MaFIN) for accurate characterization of a wide range of hardware components of an x86-64 microarchitecture with respect to various fault models (transient, intermittent, permanent faults). Next, using the same tool and focusing on transient faults, we present several reliability and performance related studies that can assist design decision in the early design phases. Moreover, we propose two methodologies to accelerate the statistical fault injection campaigns. In the first one, we accelerate the fault injection campaigns after the actual injection of the faults in the simulated hardware structures. In the second, we further accelerate the microarchitecture level fault injection campaigns by proposing MeRLiN a fault pre-processing methodology that is based on the pruning of the initial fault list by grouping the faults in equivalent classes according to the instruction access patterns to hardware entries. • Manufacturing phase and release to the market: The contributions of this thesis in these phases of microprocessors life-cycle cover two important aspects. Firstly, using the 48-core Intel’s SCC architecture, we propose a technique to accelerate online error detection of permanent faults for many-core architectures by exploiting their high-speed message passing on-chip network. Secondly, we propose a comprehensive statistical analysis methodology to accurately predict at the system level the safe voltage operation margins of the ARMv8 cores of the X- Gene 2 chip when it operates in scaled voltage conditions

    Accelerating Hash-Based Query Processing Operations on FPGAs by a Hash Table Caching Technique

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    Extracting valuable information from the rapidly growing field of Big Data faces serious performance constraints, especially in the software-based database management systems (DBMS). In a query processing system, hash-based computational primitives such as the hash join and the group-by are the most time-consuming operations, as they frequently need to access the hash table on the high-latency off-chip memories and also to traverse whole the table. Subsequently, the hash collision is an inherent issue related to the hash tables, which can adversely degrade the overall performance. In order to alleviate this problem, in this paper, we present a novel pure hardware-based hash engine, implemented on the FPGA. In order to mitigate the high memory access latencies and also to faster resolve the hash collisions, we follow a novel design point. It is based on caching the hash table entries in the fast on-chip Block-RAMs of FPGA. Faster accesses to the correspondent hash table entries from the cache can lead to an improved overall performance. We evaluate the proposed approach by running hash-based table join and group-by operations of 5 TPC-H benchmark queries. The results show 2.9×–4.4× speedups over the cache-less FPGA-based baseline.The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013), for Advanced Analytics for Extremely Large European Databases (AXLE) project under grant agreement number 318633, and from the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain under contract number TIN2015-65316-p.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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