162 research outputs found

    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationInteractive editing and manipulation of digital media is a fundamental component in digital content creation. One media in particular, digital imagery, has seen a recent increase in popularity of its large or even massive image formats. Unfortunately, current systems and techniques are rarely concerned with scalability or usability with these large images. Moreover, processing massive (or even large) imagery is assumed to be an off-line, automatic process, although many problems associated with these datasets require human intervention for high quality results. This dissertation details how to design interactive image techniques that scale. In particular, massive imagery is typically constructed as a seamless mosaic of many smaller images. The focus of this work is the creation of new technologies to enable user interaction in the formation of these large mosaics. While an interactive system for all stages of the mosaic creation pipeline is a long-term research goal, this dissertation concentrates on the last phase of the mosaic creation pipeline - the composition of registered images into a seamless composite. The work detailed in this dissertation provides the technologies to fully realize interactive editing in mosaic composition on image collections ranging from the very small to massive in scale

    ACOTES project: Advanced compiler technologies for embedded streaming

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    Streaming applications are built of data-driven, computational components, consuming and producing unbounded data streams. Streaming oriented systems have become dominant in a wide range of domains, including embedded applications and DSPs. However, programming efficiently for streaming architectures is a challenging task, having to carefully partition the computation and map it to processes in a way that best matches the underlying streaming architecture, taking into account the distributed resources (memory, processing, real-time requirements) and communication overheads (processing and delay). These challenges have led to a number of suggested solutions, whose goal is to improve the programmer’s productivity in developing applications that process massive streams of data on programmable, parallel embedded architectures. StreamIt is one such example. Another more recent approach is that developed by the ACOTES project (Advanced Compiler Technologies for Embedded Streaming). The ACOTES approach for streaming applications consists of compiler-assisted mapping of streaming tasks to highly parallel systems in order to maximize cost-effectiveness, both in terms of energy and in terms of design effort. The analysis and transformation techniques automate large parts of the partitioning and mapping process, based on the properties of the application domain, on the quantitative information about the target systems, and on programmer directives. This paper presents the outcomes of the ACOTES project, a 3-year collaborative work of industrial (NXP, ST, IBM, Silicon Hive, NOKIA) and academic (UPC, INRIA, MINES ParisTech) partners, and advocates the use of Advanced Compiler Technologies that we developed to support Embedded Streaming.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    An Efficient NoC-based Framework To Improve Dataflow Thread Management At Runtime

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    This doctoral thesis focuses on how the application threads that are based on dataflow execution model can be managed at Network-on-Chip (NoC) level. The roots of the dataflow execution model date back to the early 1970’s. Applications adhering to such program execution model follow a simple producer-consumer communication scheme for synchronising parallel thread related activities. In dataflow execution environment, a thread can run if and only if all its required inputs are available. Applications running on a large and complex computing environment can significantly benefit from the adoption of dataflow model. In the first part of the thesis, the work is focused on the thread distribution mechanism. It has been shown that how a scalable hash-based thread distribution mechanism can be implemented at the router level with low overheads. To enhance the support further, a tool to monitor the dataflow threads’ status and a simple, functional model is also incorporated into the design. Next, a software defined NoC has been proposed to manage the distribution of dataflow threads by exploiting its reconfigurability. The second part of this work is focused more on NoC microarchitecture level. Traditional 2D-mesh topology is combined with a standard ring, to understand how such hybrid network topology can outperform the traditional topology (such as 2D-mesh). Finally, a mixed-integer linear programming based analytical model has been proposed to verify if the application threads mapped on to the free cores is optimal or not. The proposed mathematical model can be used as a yardstick to verify the solution quality of the newly developed mapping policy. It is not trivial to provide a complete low-level framework for dataflow thread execution for better resource and power management. However, this work could be considered as a primary framework to which improvements could be carried out

    Scalable and Reliable Middlebox Deployment

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    Middleboxes are pervasive in modern computer networks providing functionalities beyond mere packet forwarding. Load balancers, intrusion detection systems, and network address translators are typical examples of middleboxes. Despite their benefits, middleboxes come with several challenges with respect to their scalability and reliability. The goal of this thesis is to devise middlebox deployment solutions that are cost effective, scalable, and fault tolerant. The thesis includes three main contributions: First, distributed service function chaining with multiple instances of a middlebox deployed on different physical servers to optimize resource usage; Second, Constellation, a geo-distributed middlebox framework enabling a middlebox application to operate with high performance across wide area networks; Third, a fault tolerant service function chaining system

    Architectures for dependable modern microprocessors

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    Η εξέλιξη των ολοκληρωμένων κυκλωμάτων σε συνδυασμό με τους αυστηρούς χρονικούς περιορισμούς καθιστούν την επαλήθευση της ορθής λειτουργίας των επεξεργαστών μία εξαιρετικά απαιτητική διαδικασία. Με κριτήριο το στάδιο του κύκλου ζωής ενός επεξεργαστή, από την στιγμή κατασκευής των πρωτοτύπων και έπειτα, οι τεχνικές ελέγχου ορθής λειτουργίας διακρίνονται στις ακόλουθες κατηγορίες: (1) Silicon Debug: Τα πρωτότυπα ολοκληρωμένα κυκλώματα ελέγχονται εξονυχιστικά, (2) Manufacturing Testing: ο τελικό ποιοτικός έλεγχος και (3) In-field verification: Περιλαμβάνει τεχνικές, οι οποίες διασφαλίζουν την λειτουργία του επεξεργαστή σύμφωνα με τις προδιαγραφές του. Η διδακτορική διατριβή προτείνει τα ακόλουθα: (1) Silicon Debug: Η εργασία αποσκοπεί στην επιτάχυνση της διαδικασίας ανίχνευσης σφαλμάτων και στον αυτόματο εντοπισμό τυχαίων προγραμμάτων που δεν περιέχουν νέα -χρήσιμη- πληροφορία σχετικά με την αίτια ενός σφάλματος. Η κεντρική ιδέα αυτής της μεθόδου έγκειται στην αξιοποίηση της έμφυτης ποικιλομορφίας των αρχιτεκτονικών συνόλου εντολών και στην δυνατότητα από-διαμόρφωσης τμημάτων του κυκλώματος, (2) Manufacturing Testing: προτείνεται μία μέθοδο για την βελτιστοποίηση του έλεγχου ορθής λειτουργίας των πολυνηματικών και πολυπύρηνων επεξεργαστών μέσω της χρήση λογισμικού αυτοδοκιμής, (3) Ιn-field verification: Αναλύθηκε σε βάθος η επίδραση που έχουν τα μόνιμα σφάλματα σε μηχανισμούς αύξησης της απόδοσης. Επιπρόσθετα, προτάθηκαν τεχνικές για την ανίχνευση και ανοχή μόνιμων σφαλμάτων υλικού σε μηχανισμούς πρόβλεψης διακλάδωσης.Technology scaling, extreme chip integration and the compelling requirement to diminish the time-to-market window, has rendered microprocessors more prone to design bugs and hardware faults. Microprocessor validation is grouped into the following categories, based on where they intervene in a microprocessor’s lifecycle: (a) Silicon debug: the first hardware prototypes are exhaustively validated, (b) Μanufacturing testing: the final quality control during massive production, and (c) In-field verification: runtime error detection techniques to guarantee correct operation. The contributions of this thesis are the following: (1) Silicon debug: We propose the employment of deconfigurable microprocessor architectures along with a technique to generate self-checking random test programs to avoid the simulation step and triage the redundant debug sessions, (2) Manufacturing testing: We propose a self-test optimization strategy for multithreaded, multicore microprocessors to speedup test program execution time and enhance the fault coverage of hard errors; and (3) In-field verification: We measure the effect of permanent faults performance components. Then, we propose a set of low-cost mechanisms for the detection, diagnosis and performance recovery in the front-end speculative structures. This thesis introduces various novel methodologies to address the validation challenges posed throughout the life-cycle of a chip
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