1,280 research outputs found
Dynamic Power Management for Neuromorphic Many-Core Systems
This work presents a dynamic power management architecture for neuromorphic
many core systems such as SpiNNaker. A fast dynamic voltage and frequency
scaling (DVFS) technique is presented which allows the processing elements (PE)
to change their supply voltage and clock frequency individually and
autonomously within less than 100 ns. This is employed by the neuromorphic
simulation software flow, which defines the performance level (PL) of the PE
based on the actual workload within each simulation cycle. A test chip in 28 nm
SLP CMOS technology has been implemented. It includes 4 PEs which can be scaled
from 0.7 V to 1.0 V with frequencies from 125 MHz to 500 MHz at three distinct
PLs. By measurement of three neuromorphic benchmarks it is shown that the total
PE power consumption can be reduced by 75%, with 80% baseline power reduction
and a 50% reduction of energy per neuron and synapse computation, all while
maintaining temporary peak system performance to achieve biological real-time
operation of the system. A numerical model of this power management model is
derived which allows DVFS architecture exploration for neuromorphics. The
proposed technique is to be used for the second generation SpiNNaker
neuromorphic many core system
The Octopus switch
This chapter1 discusses the interconnection architecture of the Mobile Digital Companion. The approach to build a low-power handheld multimedia computer presented here is to have autonomous, reconfigurable modules such as network, video and audio devices, interconnected by a switch rather than by a bus, and to offload as much as work as possible from the CPU to programmable modules placed in the data streams. Thus, communication between components is not broadcast over a bus but delivered exactly where it is needed, work is carried out where the data passes through, bypassing the memory. The amount of buffering is minimised, and if it is required at all, it is placed right on the data path, where it is needed. A reconfigurable internal communication network switch called Octopus exploits locality of reference and eliminates wasteful data copies. The switch is implemented as a simplified ATM switch and provides Quality of Service guarantees and enough bandwidth for multimedia applications. We have built a testbed of the architecture, of which we will present performance and energy consumption characteristics
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Survey of unified approaches to integrated-service networks
The increasing demand for communication services, coupled with recent technological advances in communication media and switching techniques, has resulted in a proliferation of new and expanded services. Currently, networks are needed which can transmit voice, data, and video services in an application-independent fashion. Unified approaches employ a single switching technique across the entire network bandwidth, thus, allowing services to be switched in an application-independent manner. This paper presents a taxonomy of integrated-service networks including a look at N-ISDN, while focusing on unified approaches to integrated-service networks.The two most promising unified approaches are burst and fast packet switching. Burst switching is a circuit switching-based approach which allocates channel bandwidth to a connection only during the transmission of "bursts" of information. Fast packet switching is a packet switching-based approach which can be characterized by very high transmission rates on network links and simple, hardwired protocols which match the rapid channel speed of the network. Both approaches are being proposed as possible implementations for integrated-service networks. We survey these two approaches, and also examine the key performance issues found in fast packet switching. We then present the results of a simulation study of a fast packet switching network
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Survey of switching techniques in high-speed networks and their performance
One of the most promising approaches for high speed networks for integrated service applications is fast packet switching, or ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode). ATM can be characterized by very high speed transmission links and simple, hard wired protocols within a network. To match the transmission speed of the network links, and to minimize the overhead due to the processing of network protocols, the switching of cells is done in hardware switching fabrics in ATM networks.A number of designs has been proposed for implementing ATM switches. While many differences exist among the proposals, the vast majority of them is based on self-routing multi-stage interconnection networks. This is because of the desirable features of multi-stage interconnection networks such as self-routing capability and suitability for VLSI implementation.Existing ATM switch architectures can be classified into two major classes: blocking switches, where blockings of cells may occur within a switch when more than one cell contends for the same internal link, and non-blocking switches, where no internal blocking occurs. A large number of techniques has also been proposed to improve the performance of blocking and nonblocking switches. In this paper, we present an extensive survey of the existing proposals for ATM switch architectures, focusing on their performance issues
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