262 research outputs found

    A Survey and Comparative Study of Hard and Soft Real-time Dynamic Resource Allocation Strategies for Multi/Many-core Systems

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    Multi-/many-core systems are envisioned to satisfy the ever-increasing performance requirements of complex applications in various domains such as embedded and high-performance computing. Such systems need to cater to increasingly dynamic workloads, requiring efficient dynamic resource allocation strategies to satisfy hard or soft real-time constraints. This article provides an extensive survey of hard and soft real-time dynamic resource allocation strategies proposed since the mid-1990s and highlights the emerging trends for multi-/many-core systems. The survey covers a taxonomy of the resource allocation strategies and considers their various optimization objectives, which have been used to provide comprehensive comparison. The strategies employ various principles, such as market and biological concepts, to perform the optimizations. The trend followed by the resource allocation strategies, open research challenges, and likely emerging research directions have also been provided

    Design Space Exploration for MPSoC Architectures

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    Multiprocessor system-on-chip (MPSoC) designs utilize the available technology and communication architectures to meet the requirements of the upcoming applications. In MPSoC, the communication platform is both the key enabler, as well as the key differentiator for realizing efficient MPSoCs. It provides product differentiation to meet a diverse, multi-dimensional set of design constraints, including performance, power, energy, reconfigurability, scalability, cost, reliability and time-to-market. The communication resources of a single interconnection platform cannot be fully utilized by all kind of applications, such as the availability of higher communication bandwidth for computation but not data intensive applications is often unfeasible in the practical implementation. This thesis aims to perform the architecture-level design space exploration towards efficient and scalable resource utilization for MPSoC communication architecture. In order to meet the performance requirements within the design constraints, careful selection of MPSoC communication platform, resource aware partitioning and mapping of the application play important role. To enhance the utilization of communication resources, variety of techniques such as resource sharing, multicast to avoid re-transmission of identical data, and adaptive routing can be used. For implementation, these techniques should be customized according to the platform architecture. To address the resource utilization of MPSoC communication platforms, variety of architectures with different design parameters and performance levels, namely Segmented bus (SegBus), Network-on-Chip (NoC) and Three-Dimensional NoC (3D-NoC), are selected. Average packet latency and power consumption are the evaluation parameters for the proposed techniques. In conventional computing architectures, fault on a component makes the connected fault-free components inoperative. Resource sharing approach can utilize the fault-free components to retain the system performance by reducing the impact of faults. Design space exploration also guides to narrow down the selection of MPSoC architecture, which can meet the performance requirements with design constraints.Siirretty Doriast

    Design of Thermal Management Control Policies for Multiprocessors Systems on Chip

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    The contribution of this thesis is a thorough study of thermal aware policy design for MPSoCs. The study includes the modelling of their thermal behavior as well as the improvement and the definition of new thermal management and balancing policies. The work is structured on three main specific disciplines. The areas of contributions are: modeling, algorithms and system design. This thesis extends the field of modeling by proposing new techniques to represent the thermal behavior of MPSoCs using a mathematical formalization. Heat transfer and modelling of physical properties of MPSoCs have been extensively studied. Special emphasis is given to the way the system cools down (i.e. micro-cooling, natural heat dissipation etc.) and the heat propagates inside the MPSoC. The second contribution of this work is related to policies, which manage MPSoC working frequencies and micro-cooling pumps to satisfy user requirements in the most effective possible way, while consuming the lowest possible amount of resources. Several families of thermal policies algorithms have been studied and analyzed in this work for both 2D and 3D MPSoCs including liquid cooling technologies. The discipline of system design has also been extended during the development of this thesis. Thermal management policies have been implemented in real emulation platforms and contributions in this area are related to the design and implementation of proposed innovations in real MPSoC platforms

    A design concept for radiation hardened RADFET readout system for space applications

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    Instruments for measuring the absorbed dose and dose rate under radiation exposure, known as radiation dosimeters, are indispensable in space missions. They are composed of radiation sensors that generate current or voltage response when exposed to ionizing radiation, and processing electronics for computing the absorbed dose and dose rate. Among a wide range of existing radiation sensors, the Radiation Sensitive Field Effect Transistors (RADFETs) have unique advantages for absorbed dose measurement, and a proven record of successful exploitation in space missions. It has been shown that the RADFETs may be also used for the dose rate monitoring. In that regard, we propose a unique design concept that supports the simultaneous operation of a single RADFET as absorbed dose and dose rate monitor. This enables to reduce the cost of implementation, since the need for other types of radiation sensors can be minimized or eliminated. For processing the RADFET's response we propose a readout system composed of analog signal conditioner (ASC) and a self-adaptive multiprocessing system-on-chip (MPSoC). The soft error rate of MPSoC is monitored in real time with embedded sensors, allowing the autonomous switching between three operating modes (high-performance, de-stress and fault-tolerant), according to the application requirements and radiation conditions

    A Survey of Prediction and Classification Techniques in Multicore Processor Systems

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    In multicore processor systems, being able to accurately predict the future provides new optimization opportunities, which otherwise could not be exploited. For example, an oracle able to predict a certain application\u27s behavior running on a smart phone could direct the power manager to switch to appropriate dynamic voltage and frequency scaling modes that would guarantee minimum levels of desired performance while saving energy consumption and thereby prolonging battery life. Using predictions enables systems to become proactive rather than continue to operate in a reactive manner. This prediction-based proactive approach has become increasingly popular in the design and optimization of integrated circuits and of multicore processor systems. Prediction transforms from simple forecasting to sophisticated machine learning based prediction and classification that learns from existing data, employs data mining, and predicts future behavior. This can be exploited by novel optimization techniques that can span across all layers of the computing stack. In this survey paper, we present a discussion of the most popular techniques on prediction and classification in the general context of computing systems with emphasis on multicore processors. The paper is far from comprehensive, but, it will help the reader interested in employing prediction in optimization of multicore processor systems

    Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Reconfigurable Communication-centric Systems on Chip 2010 - ReCoSoC\u2710 - May 17-19, 2010 Karlsruhe, Germany. (KIT Scientific Reports ; 7551)

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    ReCoSoC is intended to be a periodic annual meeting to expose and discuss gathered expertise as well as state of the art research around SoC related topics through plenary invited papers and posters. The workshop aims to provide a prospective view of tomorrow\u27s challenges in the multibillion transistor era, taking into account the emerging techniques and architectures exploring the synergy between flexible on-chip communication and system reconfigurability

    Development and Qualification of an FPGA-Based Multi-Processor System-on-Chip On-Board Computer for LEO Satellites

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    九州工業大学博士学位論文 学位記番号:工博甲第374号 学位授与年月日:平成26年9月26日Chapter 1: Introduction||Chapter 2: Background and Literature Review||Chapter 3: Multi-Processor System-on-Chip On-Borad Computer Design||Chapter 4: Space and Time Redundancy Trade-offs||Chapter 5: Radiation and Fault Injection Testing||Chapter 6: Thermal Vacuum Testing||Chapter 7: Results and Discussion||Chapter 8: Conclusion and Future Perspectives||ReferencesDeveloping small satellites for scientific and commercial purposes is emerging rapidly in the last decade. The future is still expected to carry more challenging services and designs to fulfill the growing needs for space based services. Nevertheless, there exists a big challenge in developing cost effective and highly efficient small satellites yet with accepted reliability and power consumption that is adequate to the mission capabilities. This challenge mandates the use of the recent developments in digital design techniques and technologies to strike the required balance between the four basic parameters: 1) Cost, 2) Performance, 3) Reliability and 4) Power consumption. This balance becomes even more stringent and harder to reach when the satellite mass reduces significantly. Mass reduction puts strict constraints on the power system in terms of the solar panels and the batteries. That fact creates the need to miniaturize the design of the subsystems as much as possible which can be viewed as the fifth parameter in the design balance dilemma. At Kyuhsu Institute of Technology-Japan we are investigating the use of SRAMbased Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) in building: 1) High performance, 2)Low cost, 3) Moderate power consumption and 4) Highly reliable Muti-Processor System-on-Chip (MPSoC) On-Board Computers (OBC) for future space missions and applications. This research tries to investigate how commercial grade SRAMbased FPGAs would perform in space and how to mitigate them against the space environment. Our methodology to answer that question depended on following formal design procedure for the OBC according to the space environment requirements then qualifying the design through extensive testing. We developed the MPSoC OBC with 4 complete embedded processor systems. The Inter Processor Communication (IPC) takes place through hardware First-In-First-Out (FIFO) mailboxes. One processor acts as the system master controller which monitors the operation and controls the reset and restore of the system in case of faults and the other three processors form Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) fault tolerance architecture with each other. We used Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (DPR) in scrubbing the configuration memory frames and correcting the faults that might exist. The system is implemented using a Virtex-5 LX50 commercial grade FPGA from Xilinx. The research also qualifies the design in the ground-simulated space environment conditions. We tested the implemented MPSoC OBC in Thermal Vacuum Chambers (TVC) at the Center of Nano-Satellite Testing (CeNT) at Kyushu Institute of Technology. Also we irradiated the design with proton accelerated beam at 65 MeV with fluxes of 10e06 and 3e06 particle/cm2/sec at the Takasaki Advanced Radiation Research Institute (TARRI). The TVC test results showed that the FPGA design exceeded the limits of normal operation for the commercial grade package at about 105 C°. Therefore, we mitigated the package using: 1) heat sink, 2) dynamic temperature management through operating frequency reduction from 100 MHz to 50 MHz and 3) reconfiguration to reduce the number of working processors to 2 instead of 4 by replacing the spaceredundancy TMR with time-redundancy TMR during the sunlight section of the orbit. The mitigation proved to be efficient and it even reduced the temperature from 105 C° to about 66 C° when the heat sink, frequency reduction, and reconfiguration techniques were used together. The radiation and the fault injection tests showed that mitigating the FPGA configuration frames through scrubbing are efficient when Single Bit Upsets (SBU) are recorded. Multiple Bit Upsets (MBU) are not well mitigated using the scrubbing with Single Error Correction Double Error Detection (SECDED) technique and the FPGA needs to be totally reset and reloaded when MBUs are detected in its configuration frames. However, as MBUs occurrence in space is very seldom and rare compared to SBUs, we consider that SECDED scrubbing is very efficient in decreasing the soft error rate and increasing the reliability of having error-free bitstreams. The reliability was proven to be at 0.9999 when the scrubbing rate was continuous at a period of 7.1 msec between complete scans of the FPGA bitstream. In the proton radiation tests we managed to develop a new technique to estimate the static cross section using internal scrubbing only without using external monitoring, control and scrubbing device. Fault injection was used to estimate the dynamic cross section in a cost effective alternative for estimating it through radiation test. The research proved through detailed testing that the 65 nm commercial grade SRAM-based FPGA can be used in future space missions. The MPSoC OBC design achieved an adequate balance between the performance, power, mass, and reliability requirements. Extensive testing and applying carefully crafted mitigation techniques were the key points to verify and validate the MPSoC OBC design. In-orbit validation through a scientific demonstration mission would be the next step for the future research

    Low power architectures for streaming applications

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    TSV placement optimization for liquid cooled 3D-ICs with emerging NVMs

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    Three dimensional integrated circuits (3D-ICs) are a promising solution to the performance bottleneck in planar integrated circuits. One of the salient features of 3D-ICs is their ability to integrate heterogeneous technologies such as emerging non-volatile memories (NVMs) in a single chip. However, thermal management in 3D-ICs is a significant challenge, owing to the high heat flux (~ 250 W/cm2). Several research groups have focused either on run-time or design-time mechanisms to reduce the heat flux and did not consider 3D-ICs with heterogeneous stacks. The goal of this work is to achieve a balanced thermal gradient in 3D-ICs, while reducing the peak temperatures. In this research, placement algorithms for design-time optimization and choice of appropriate cooling mechanisms for run-time modulation of temperature are proposed. Specifically, an architectural framework which introduce weight-based simulated annealing (WSA) algorithm for thermal-aware placement of through silicon vias (TSVs) with inter-tier liquid cooling is proposed for design-time. In addition, integrating a dedicated stack of emerging NVMs such as RRAM, PCRAM and STTRAM, a run-time simulation framework is developed to analyze the thermal and performance impact of these NVMs in 3D-MPSoCs with inter-tier liquid cooling. Experimental results of WSA algorithm implemented on MCNC91 and GSRC benchmarks demonstrate up to 11 K reduction in the average temperature across the 3D-IC chip. In addition, power density arrangement in WSA improved the uniformity by 5%. Furthermore, simulation results of PARSEC benchmarks with NVM L2 cache demonstrates a temperature reduction of 12.5 K (RRAM) compared to SRAM in 3D-ICs. Especially, RRAM has proved to be thermally efficient replacement for SRAM with 34% lower energy delay product (EDP) and 9.7 K average temperature reduction
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