7 research outputs found

    Adaptive Knobs for Resource Efficient Computing

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    Performance demands of emerging domains such as artificial intelligence, machine learning and vision, Internet-of-things etc., continue to grow. Meeting such requirements on modern multi/many core systems with higher power densities, fixed power and energy budgets, and thermal constraints exacerbates the run-time management challenge. This leaves an open problem on extracting the required performance within the power and energy limits, while also ensuring thermal safety. Existing architectural solutions including asymmetric and heterogeneous cores and custom acceleration improve performance-per-watt in specific design time and static scenarios. However, satisfying applications’ performance requirements under dynamic and unknown workload scenarios subject to varying system dynamics of power, temperature and energy requires intelligent run-time management. Adaptive strategies are necessary for maximizing resource efficiency, considering i) diverse requirements and characteristics of concurrent applications, ii) dynamic workload variation, iii) core-level heterogeneity and iv) power, thermal and energy constraints. This dissertation proposes such adaptive techniques for efficient run-time resource management to maximize performance within fixed budgets under unknown and dynamic workload scenarios. Resource management strategies proposed in this dissertation comprehensively consider application and workload characteristics and variable effect of power actuation on performance for pro-active and appropriate allocation decisions. Specific contributions include i) run-time mapping approach to improve power budgets for higher throughput, ii) thermal aware performance boosting for efficient utilization of power budget and higher performance, iii) approximation as a run-time knob exploiting accuracy performance trade-offs for maximizing performance under power caps at minimal loss of accuracy and iv) co-ordinated approximation for heterogeneous systems through joint actuation of dynamic approximation and power knobs for performance guarantees with minimal power consumption. The approaches presented in this dissertation focus on adapting existing mapping techniques, performance boosting strategies, software and dynamic approximations to meet the performance requirements, simultaneously considering system constraints. The proposed strategies are compared against relevant state-of-the-art run-time management frameworks to qualitatively evaluate their efficacy

    Smart hill climbing for agile dynamic mapping in many-core systems

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    Energy-Efficient and Reliable Computing in Dark Silicon Era

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    Dark silicon denotes the phenomenon that, due to thermal and power constraints, the fraction of transistors that can operate at full frequency is decreasing in each technology generation. Moore’s law and Dennard scaling had been backed and coupled appropriately for five decades to bring commensurate exponential performance via single core and later muti-core design. However, recalculating Dennard scaling for recent small technology sizes shows that current ongoing multi-core growth is demanding exponential thermal design power to achieve linear performance increase. This process hits a power wall where raises the amount of dark or dim silicon on future multi/many-core chips more and more. Furthermore, from another perspective, by increasing the number of transistors on the area of a single chip and susceptibility to internal defects alongside aging phenomena, which also is exacerbated by high chip thermal density, monitoring and managing the chip reliability before and after its activation is becoming a necessity. The proposed approaches and experimental investigations in this thesis focus on two main tracks: 1) power awareness and 2) reliability awareness in dark silicon era, where later these two tracks will combine together. In the first track, the main goal is to increase the level of returns in terms of main important features in chip design, such as performance and throughput, while maximum power limit is honored. In fact, we show that by managing the power while having dark silicon, all the traditional benefits that could be achieved by proceeding in Moore’s law can be also achieved in the dark silicon era, however, with a lower amount. Via the track of reliability awareness in dark silicon era, we show that dark silicon can be considered as an opportunity to be exploited for different instances of benefits, namely life-time increase and online testing. We discuss how dark silicon can be exploited to guarantee the system lifetime to be above a certain target value and, furthermore, how dark silicon can be exploited to apply low cost non-intrusive online testing on the cores. After the demonstration of power and reliability awareness while having dark silicon, two approaches will be discussed as the case study where the power and reliability awareness are combined together. The first approach demonstrates how chip reliability can be used as a supplementary metric for power-reliability management. While the second approach provides a trade-off between workload performance and system reliability by simultaneously honoring the given power budget and target reliability

    Turku Centre for Computer Science – Annual Report 2013

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    Due to a major reform of organization and responsibilities of TUCS, its role, activities, and even structures have been under reconsideration in 2013. The traditional pillar of collaboration at TUCS, doctoral training, was reorganized due to changes at both universities according to the renewed national system for doctoral education. Computer Science and Engineering and Information Systems Science are now accompanied by Mathematics and Statistics in newly established doctoral programs at both University of Turku and &Aring;bo Akademi University. Moreover, both universities granted sufficient resources to their respective programmes for doctoral training in these fields, so that joint activities at TUCS can continue. The outcome of this reorganization has the potential of proving out to be a success in terms of scientific profile as well as the quality and quantity of scientific and educational results.&nbsp; International activities that have been characteristic to TUCS since its inception continue strong. TUCS&rsquo; participation in European collaboration through EIT ICT Labs Master&rsquo;s and Doctoral School is now more active than ever. The new double degree programs at MSc and PhD level between University of Turku and Fudan University in Shaghai, P.R.China were succesfully set up and are&nbsp; now running for their first year. The joint students will add to the already international athmosphere of the ICT House.&nbsp; The four new thematic reseach programmes set up acccording to the decision by the TUCS Board have now established themselves, and a number of events and other activities saw the light in 2013. The TUCS Distinguished Lecture Series managed to gather a large audience with its several prominent speakers. The development of these and other research centre activities continue, and&nbsp; new practices and structures will be initiated to support the tradition of close academic collaboration.&nbsp; The TUCS&rsquo; slogan Where Academic Tradition Meets the Exciting Future has proven true throughout these changes. Despite of the dark clouds on the national and European economic sky, science and higher education in the field have managed to retain all the key ingredients for success. Indeed, the future of ICT and Mathematics in Turku seems exciting.</p

    Resource Management for Multicores to Optimize Performance under Temperature and Aging Constraints

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    Scalable Task Schedulers for Many-Core Architectures

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    This thesis develops schedulers for many-cores with different optimization objectives. The proposed schedulers are designed to be scale up as the number of cores in many-cores increase while continuing to provide guarantees on the quality of the schedule

    Erreichen von Performance in Netzwerken-On-Chip fĂĽr Echtzeitsysteme

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    In many new applications, such as in automatic driving, high performance requirements have reached safety critical real-time systems. Consequently, Networks-on-Chip (NoCs) must efficiently host new sets of highly dynamic workloads e.g., high resolution sensor fusion and data processing, autonomous decision’s making combined with machine learning. The static platform management, as used in current safety critical systems, is no more sufficient to provide the needed level of service. A dynamic platform management could meet the challenge, but it usually suffers from a lack of predictability and the simplicity necessary for certification of safety and real-time properties. In this work, we propose a novel, global and dynamic arbitration for NoCs with real-time QoS requirements. The mechanism decouples the admission control from arbitration in routers thereby simplifying a dynamic adaptation and real-time analysis. Consequently, the proposed solution allows the deployment of a sophisticated contract-based QoS provisioning without introducing complicated and hard to maintain schemes, known from the frequently applied static arbiters. The presented work introduces an overlay network to synchronize transmissions using arbitration units called Resource Managers (RMs), which allows global and work-conserving scheduling. The description of resource allocation strategies is supplemented by protocol design and verification methodology bringing adaptive control to NoC communication in setups with different QoS requirements and traffic classes. For doing that, a formal worst-case timing analysis for the mechanism has been proposed which demonstrates that this solution not only exposes higher performance in simulation but, even more importantly, consistently reaches smaller formally guaranteed worst-case latencies than other strategies for realistic levels of system's utilization. The approach is not limited to a specific network architecture or topology as the mechanism does not require modifications of routers and therefore can be used together with the majority of existing manycore systems. Indeed, the evaluation followed using the generic performance optimized router designs, as well as two systems-on-chip focused on real-time deployments. The results confirmed that the proposed approach proves to exhibit significantly higher average performance in simulation and execution.In vielen neuen sicherheitskritische Anwendungen, wie z.B. dem automatisierten Fahren, werden große Anforderungen an die Leistung von Echtzeitsysteme gestellt. Daher müssen Networks-on-Chip (NoCs) neue, hochdynamische Workloads wie z.B. hochauflösende Sensorfusion und Datenverarbeitung oder autonome Entscheidungsfindung kombiniert mit maschineller Lernen, effizient auf einem System unterbringen. Die Steuerung der zugrunde liegenden NoC-Architektur, muss die Systemsicherheit vor Fehlern, resultierend aus dem dynamischen Verhalten des Systems schützen und gleichzeitig die geforderte Performance bereitstellen. In dieser Arbeit schlagen wir eine neuartige, globale und dynamische Steuerung für NoCs mit Echtzeit QoS Anforderungen vor. Das Schema entkoppelt die Zutrittskontrolle von der Arbitrierung in Routern. Hierdurch wird eine dynamische Anpassung ermöglicht und die Echtzeitanalyse vereinfacht. Der Einsatz einer ausgefeilten vertragsbasierten Ressourcen-Zuweisung wird so ermöglicht, ohne komplexe und schwer wartbare Mechanismen, welche bereits aus dem statischen Plattformmanagement bekannt sind einzuführen. Diese Arbeit stellt ein übergelagertes Netzwerk vor, welches Übertragungen mit Hilfe von Arbitrierungseinheiten, den so genannten Resource Managern (RMs), synchronisiert. Dieses überlagerte Netzwerk ermöglicht eine globale und lasterhaltende Steuerung. Die Beschreibung verschiedener Ressourcenzuweisungstrategien wird ergänzt durch ein Protokolldesign und Methoden zur Verifikation der adaptiven NoC Steuerung mit unterschiedlichen QoS Anforderungen und Verkehrsklassen. Hierfür wird eine formale Worst Case Timing Analyse präsentiert, welche das vorgestellte Verfahren abbildet. Die Resultate bestätitgen, dass die präsentierte Lösung nicht nur eine höhere Performance in der Simulation bietet, sondern auch formal kleinere Worst-Case Latenzen für realistische Systemauslastungen als andere Strategien garantiert. Der vorgestellte Ansatz ist nicht auf eine bestimmte Netzwerkarchitektur oder Topologie beschränkt, da der Mechanismus keine Änderungen an den unterliegenden Routern erfordert und kann daher zusammen mit bestehenden Manycore-Systemen eingesetzt werden. Die Evaluierung erfolgte auf Basis eines leistungsoptimierten Router-Designs sowie zwei auf Echtzeit-Anwendungen fokusierten Platformen. Die Ergebnisse bestätigten, dass der vorgeschlagene Ansatz im Durchschnitt eine deutlich höhere Leistung in der Simulation und Ausführung liefert
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