487,915 research outputs found
Open Transactions on Shared Memory
Transactional memory has arisen as a good way for solving many of the issues
of lock-based programming. However, most implementations admit isolated
transactions only, which are not adequate when we have to coordinate
communicating processes. To this end, in this paper we present OCTM, an
Haskell-like language with open transactions over shared transactional memory:
processes can join transactions at runtime just by accessing to shared
variables. Thus a transaction can co-operate with the environment through
shared variables, but if it is rolled-back, also all its effects on the
environment are retracted. For proving the expressive power of TCCS we give an
implementation of TCCS, a CCS-like calculus with open transactions
HaTS: Hardware-Assisted Transaction Scheduler
In this paper we present HaTS, a Hardware-assisted Transaction Scheduler. HaTS improves performance of concurrent applications by classifying the executions of their atomic blocks (or in-memory transactions) into scheduling queues, according to their so called conflict indicators. The goal is to group those transactions that are conflicting while letting non-conflicting transactions proceed in parallel. Two core innovations characterize HaTS. First, HaTS does not assume the availability of precise information associated with incoming transactions in order to proceed with the classification. It relaxes this assumption by exploiting the inherent conflict resolution provided by Hardware Transactional Memory (HTM). Second, HaTS dynamically adjusts the number of the scheduling queues in order to capture the actual application contention level. Performance results using the STAMP benchmark suite show up to 2x improvement over state-of-the-art HTM-based scheduling techniques
Improving the Performance and Endurance of Persistent Memory with Loose-Ordering Consistency
Persistent memory provides high-performance data persistence at main memory.
Memory writes need to be performed in strict order to satisfy storage
consistency requirements and enable correct recovery from system crashes.
Unfortunately, adhering to such a strict order significantly degrades system
performance and persistent memory endurance. This paper introduces a new
mechanism, Loose-Ordering Consistency (LOC), that satisfies the ordering
requirements at significantly lower performance and endurance loss. LOC
consists of two key techniques. First, Eager Commit eliminates the need to
perform a persistent commit record write within a transaction. We do so by
ensuring that we can determine the status of all committed transactions during
recovery by storing necessary metadata information statically with blocks of
data written to memory. Second, Speculative Persistence relaxes the write
ordering between transactions by allowing writes to be speculatively written to
persistent memory. A speculative write is made visible to software only after
its associated transaction commits. To enable this, our mechanism supports the
tracking of committed transaction ID and multi-versioning in the CPU cache. Our
evaluations show that LOC reduces the average performance overhead of memory
persistence from 66.9% to 34.9% and the memory write traffic overhead from
17.1% to 3.4% on a variety of workloads.Comment: This paper has been accepted by IEEE Transactions on Parallel and
Distributed System
Improvements in Hardware Transactional Memory for GPU Architectures
In the multi-core CPU world, transactional memory (TM)has emerged as an alternative to lock-based programming for thread synchronization. Recent research proposes the use of TM in GPU architectures, where a high number of computing threads, organized in SIMT fashion, requires an effective synchronization method. In contrast to CPUs, GPUs offer two memory spaces: global memory and local memory. The local memory space serves as a shared scratch-pad for a subset of the computing threads, and it is used by programmers to speed-up their applications thanks to its low latency. Prior work from the authors proposed a lightweight hardware TM (HTM) support based in the local memory, modifying the SIMT execution model and adding a conflict detection mechanism. An efficient implementation of these features is key in order to provide an effective synchronization mechanism at the local memory level.
After a quick description of the main features of our HTM design for GPU local memory, in this work we gather together a number of proposals designed with the aim of improving those mechanisms with high impact on performance. Firstly, the SIMT execution model is modified to increase the parallelism of the application when transactions must be serialized in order to make forward progress. Secondly, the conflict detection mechanism is optimized depending on application characteristics, such us the read/write sets, the probability of conflict between transactions and the existence of read-only transactions. As these features can be present in hardware simultaneously, it is a task of the compiler and runtime to determine which ones are more important for a given application. This work includes a discussion on the analysis to be done in order to choose the best configuration solution.Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech
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