709 research outputs found

    Enabling Fine-Grain Restricted Coset Coding Through Word-Level Compression for PCM

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    Phase change memory (PCM) has recently emerged as a promising technology to meet the fast growing demand for large capacity memory in computer systems, replacing DRAM that is impeded by physical limitations. Multi-level cell (MLC) PCM offers high density with low per-byte fabrication cost. However, despite many advantages, such as scalability and low leakage, the energy for programming intermediate states is considerably larger than programing single-level cell PCM. In this paper, we study encoding techniques to reduce write energy for MLC PCM when the encoding granularity is lowered below the typical cache line size. We observe that encoding data blocks at small granularity to reduce write energy actually increases the write energy because of the auxiliary encoding bits. We mitigate this adverse effect by 1) designing suitable codeword mappings that use fewer auxiliary bits and 2) proposing a new Word-Level Compression (WLC) which compresses more than 91% of the memory lines and provides enough room to store the auxiliary data using a novel restricted coset encoding applied at small data block granularities. Experimental results show that the proposed encoding at 16-bit data granularity reduces the write energy by 39%, on average, versus the leading encoding approach for write energy reduction. Furthermore, it improves endurance by 20% and is more reliable than the leading approach. Hardware synthesis evaluation shows that the proposed encoding can be implemented on-chip with only a nominal area overhead.Comment: 12 page

    DC-Patch: A Microarchitectural Fault Patching Technique for GPU Register Files

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    The ever-increasing parallelism demand of General-Purpose Graphics Processing Unit (GPGPU) applications pushes toward larger and more energy-hungry register files in successive GPU generations. Reducing the supply voltage beyond its safe limit is an effective way to improve the energy efficiency of register files. However, at these operating voltages, the reliability of the circuit is compromised. This work aims to tolerate permanent faults from process variations in large GPU register files operating below the safe supply voltage limit. To do so, this paper proposes a microarchitectural patching technique, DC-Patch, exploiting the inherent data redundancy of applications to compress registers at run-time with neither compiler assistance nor instruction set modifications. Instead of disabling an entire faulty register file entry, DC-Patch leverages the reliable cells within a faulty entry to store compressed register values. Experimental results show that, with more than a third of faulty register entries, DC-Patch ensures a reliable operation of the register file and reduces the energy consumption by 47% with respect to a conventional register file working at nominal supply voltage. The energy savings are 21% compared to a voltage noise smoothing scheme operating at the safe supply voltage limit. These benefits are obtained with less than 2 and 6% impact on the system performance and area, respectively

    2022 roadmap on neuromorphic computing and engineering

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    Modern computation based on von Neumann architecture is now a mature cutting-edge science. In the von Neumann architecture, processing and memory units are implemented as separate blocks interchanging data intensively and continuously. This data transfer is responsible for a large part of the power consumption. The next generation computer technology is expected to solve problems at the exascale with 1018^{18} calculations each second. Even though these future computers will be incredibly powerful, if they are based on von Neumann type architectures, they will consume between 20 and 30 megawatts of power and will not have intrinsic physically built-in capabilities to learn or deal with complex data as our brain does. These needs can be addressed by neuromorphic computing systems which are inspired by the biological concepts of the human brain. This new generation of computers has the potential to be used for the storage and processing of large amounts of digital information with much lower power consumption than conventional processors. Among their potential future applications, an important niche is moving the control from data centers to edge devices. The aim of this roadmap is to present a snapshot of the present state of neuromorphic technology and provide an opinion on the challenges and opportunities that the future holds in the major areas of neuromorphic technology, namely materials, devices, neuromorphic circuits, neuromorphic algorithms, applications, and ethics. The roadmap is a collection of perspectives where leading researchers in the neuromorphic community provide their own view about the current state and the future challenges for each research area. We hope that this roadmap will be a useful resource by providing a concise yet comprehensive introduction to readers outside this field, for those who are just entering the field, as well as providing future perspectives for those who are well established in the neuromorphic computing community

    Compression-aware and performance-efficient insertion policies for long-lasting hybrid LLCs

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    Emerging non-volatile memory (NVM) technologies can potentially replace large SRAM memories such as the last-level cache (LLC). However, despite recent advances, NVMs suffer from higher write latency and limited write endurance. Recently, NVM-SRAM hybrid LLCs are proposed to combine the best of both worlds. Several policies have been proposed to improve the performance and lifetime of hybrid LLCs by intelligently steering the incoming LLC blocks into either the SRAM or NVM part, regarding the cache behavior of the LLC blocks and the SRAM/NVM device properties. However, these policies neither consider compressing the contents of the cache block nor using partially worn-out NVM cache blocks.This paper proposes new insertion policies for byte-level fault-tolerant hybrid LLCs that collaboratively optimize for lifetime and performance. Specifically, we leverage data compression to utilize partially defective NVM cache entries, thereby improving the LLC hit rate. The key to our approach is to guide the insertion policy by both the reuse properties of the block and the size resulting from its compression. A block is inserted in NVM only if it is a read-reuse block or its compressed size is lower than a threshold. It will be inserted in SRAM if the block is a write-reuse or its compressed size is greater than the threshold. We use set-dueling to tune the compression threshold at runtime. This compression threshold provides a knob to control the NVM write rate and, together with a rule-based mechanism, allows balancing performance and lifetime.Overall, our evaluation shows that, with affordable hardware overheads, the proposed schemes can nearly reach the performance of an SRAM cache with the same associativity while improving lifetime by 17× compared to a hybrid NVM-unaware LLC. Our proposed scheme outperforms the state-of-the-art insertion policies by 9% while achieving a comparative lifetime. The rule-based mechanism shows that by compromising, for instance, 1.1% and 1.9% performance, the NVM lifetime can be further increased by 28% and 44%, respectively.This work was partially funded by the HiPEAC collaboration grant 2020, the Center for Advancing Electronics Dresden (cfaed), the German Research Council (DFG) through the HetCIM project (502388442) under the Priority Program on ‘Disruptive Memory Technologies’ (SPP 2377), and from grants (1) PID2019-105660RB-C21 and PID2019-107255GB- C22/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 from Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI), and (2) gaZ: T5820R research group from Dept. of Science, University and Knowledge Society, Government of Aragon.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Community memories for sustainable societies: The case of environmental noise

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    Sustainability is the main challenge faced by humanity today on global and local scales. Most environmental problems can be seen as the tragic overexploitation of a commons. In this dissertation we investigate how the latest developments within computer science and ICT can be applied to establish participatory, low-cost tools and practices that enable citizens to monitor, raise awareness about, and contribute to the sustainable management of the commons they rely on, and thereby protect or improve their quality of life. As a general approach we propose the use of community memories – as central data repositories and points of interaction for community members and other stakeholders – and the novel combination of participatory mobile sensing and social tagging – as a low-cost means to collect quantitative and qualitative data about the state of the commons and the health, well-being, behaviour and opinion of those that depend on it. Through applied, interdisciplinary research we develop a concrete solution for a specific, socially relevant problem, namely that of environmental noise – commonly referred to as noise pollution. Under the name NoiseTube we present an operational system that enables a participatory, low-cost approach to the assessment of environmental noise and its impact on citizens’ quality of life. This approach can be applied in the scope of citizen- or authority-led initiatives. The NoiseTube system consists of a sensing application – which turns mobile phones into a sound level meters and allows users to comment on their experience via social tagging – and a community memory – which aggregates and processes data collected by participants anywhere. The system supports and has been tested and deployed at different levels of scale – personal, group and mass sensing. Since May 2009 NoiseTube has been used by hundreds, if not thousands, of people all around the world, allowing us to draw lessons regarding the feasibility of different deployment, collaboration and coordination scenarios for participatory sensing in general. While similar systems have been proposed ours is the completest and most widely used participatory noise mapping solution to date. Our validation experiments demonstrate that the accuracy of mobile phones as sound level meters can be brought to an acceptable level through calibration and statistical reasoning. Through coordinated NoiseTube campaigns with volunteering citizens we establish that participatory noise mapping is a suitable alternative for, or a valuable complement to, conventional methods applied by authorities
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