7,789 research outputs found

    Improving processor efficiency through thermal modeling and runtime management of hybrid cooling strategies

    Full text link
    One of the main challenges in building future high performance systems is the ability to maintain safe on-chip temperatures in presence of high power densities. Handling such high power densities necessitates novel cooling solutions that are significantly more efficient than their existing counterparts. A number of advanced cooling methods have been proposed to address the temperature problem in processors. However, tradeoffs exist between performance, cost, and efficiency of those cooling methods, and these tradeoffs depend on the target system properties. Hence, a single cooling solution satisfying optimum conditions for any arbitrary system does not exist. This thesis claims that in order to reach exascale computing, a dramatic improvement in energy efficiency is needed, and achieving this improvement requires a temperature-centric co-design of the cooling and computing subsystems. Such co-design requires detailed system-level thermal modeling, design-time optimization, and runtime management techniques that are aware of the underlying processor architecture and application requirements. To this end, this thesis first proposes compact thermal modeling methods to characterize the complex thermal behavior of cutting-edge cooling solutions, mainly Phase Change Material (PCM)-based cooling, liquid cooling, and thermoelectric cooling (TEC), as well as hybrid designs involving a combination of these. The proposed models are modular and they enable fast and accurate exploration of a large design space. Comparisons against multi-physics simulations and measurements on testbeds validate the accuracy of our models (resulting in less than 1C error on average) and demonstrate significant reductions in simulation time (up to four orders of magnitude shorter simulation times). This thesis then introduces temperature-aware optimization techniques to maximize energy efficiency of a given system as a whole (including computing and cooling energy). The proposed optimization techniques approach the temperature problem from various angles, tackling major sources of inefficiency. One important angle is to understand the application power and performance characteristics and to design management techniques to match them. For workloads that require short bursts of intense parallel computation, we propose using PCM-based cooling in cooperation with a novel Adaptive Sprinting technique. By tracking the PCM state and incorporating this information during runtime decisions, Adaptive Sprinting utilizes the PCM heat storage capability more efficiently, achieving 29\% performance improvement compared to existing sprinting policies. In addition to the application characteristics, high heterogeneity in on-chip heat distribution is an important factor affecting efficiency. Hot spots occur on different locations of the chip with varying intensities; thus, designing a uniform cooling solution to handle worst-case hot spots significantly reduces the cooling efficiency. The hybrid cooling techniques proposed as part of this thesis address this issue by combining the strengths of different cooling methods and localizing the cooling effort over hot spots. Specifically, the thesis introduces LoCool, a cooling system optimizer that minimizes cooling power under temperature constraints for hybrid-cooled systems using TECs and liquid cooling. Finally, the scope of this work is not limited to existing advanced cooling solutions, but it also extends to emerging technologies and their potential benefits and tradeoffs. One such technology is integrated flow cell array, where fuel cells are pumped through microchannels, providing both cooling and on-chip power generation. This thesis explores a broad range of design parameters including maximum chip temperature, leakage power, and generated power for flow cell arrays in order to maximize the benefits of integrating this technology with computing systems. Through thermal modeling and runtime management techniques, and by exploring the design space of emerging cooling solutions, this thesis provides significant improvements in processor energy efficiency.2018-07-09T00:00:00

    Scalability of broadcast performance in wireless network-on-chip

    Get PDF
    Networks-on-Chip (NoCs) are currently the paradigm of choice to interconnect the cores of a chip multiprocessor. However, conventional NoCs may not suffice to fulfill the on-chip communication requirements of processors with hundreds or thousands of cores. The main reason is that the performance of such networks drops as the number of cores grows, especially in the presence of multicast and broadcast traffic. This not only limits the scalability of current multiprocessor architectures, but also sets a performance wall that prevents the development of architectures that generate moderate-to-high levels of multicast. In this paper, a Wireless Network-on-Chip (WNoC) where all cores share a single broadband channel is presented. Such design is conceived to provide low latency and ordered delivery for multicast/broadcast traffic, in an attempt to complement a wireline NoC that will transport the rest of communication flows. To assess the feasibility of this approach, the network performance of WNoC is analyzed as a function of the system size and the channel capacity, and then compared to that of wireline NoCs with embedded multicast support. Based on this evaluation, preliminary results on the potential performance of the proposed hybrid scheme are provided, together with guidelines for the design of MAC protocols for WNoC.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    A Survey of Prediction and Classification Techniques in Multicore Processor Systems

    Get PDF
    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

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

    Get PDF
    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

    Thermal-Aware Networked Many-Core Systems

    Get PDF
    Advancements in IC processing technology has led to the innovation and growth happening in the consumer electronics sector and the evolution of the IT infrastructure supporting this exponential growth. One of the most difficult obstacles to this growth is the removal of large amount of heatgenerated by the processing and communicating nodes on the system. The scaling down of technology and the increase in power density is posing a direct and consequential effect on the rise in temperature. This has resulted in the increase in cooling budgets, and affects both the life-time reliability and performance of the system. Hence, reducing on-chip temperatures has become a major design concern for modern microprocessors. This dissertation addresses the thermal challenges at different levels for both 2D planer and 3D stacked systems. It proposes a self-timed thermal monitoring strategy based on the liberal use of on-chip thermal sensors. This makes use of noise variation tolerant and leakage current based thermal sensing for monitoring purposes. In order to study thermal management issues from early design stages, accurate thermal modeling and analysis at design time is essential. In this regard, spatial temperature profile of the global Cu nanowire for on-chip interconnects has been analyzed. It presents a 3D thermal model of a multicore system in order to investigate the effects of hotspots and the placement of silicon die layers, on the thermal performance of a modern ip-chip package. For a 3D stacked system, the primary design goal is to maximise the performance within the given power and thermal envelopes. Hence, a thermally efficient routing strategy for 3D NoC-Bus hybrid architectures has been proposed to mitigate on-chip temperatures by herding most of the switching activity to the die which is closer to heat sink. Finally, an exploration of various thermal-aware placement approaches for both the 2D and 3D stacked systems has been presented. Various thermal models have been developed and thermal control metrics have been extracted. An efficient thermal-aware application mapping algorithm for a 2D NoC has been presented. It has been shown that the proposed mapping algorithm reduces the effective area reeling under high temperatures when compared to the state of the art.Siirretty Doriast
    • …
    corecore