466 research outputs found

    Fairness-aware scheduling on single-ISA heterogeneous multi-cores

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    Single-ISA heterogeneous multi-cores consisting of small (e.g., in-order) and big (e.g., out-of-order) cores dramatically improve energy- and power-efficiency by scheduling workloads on the most appropriate core type. A significant body of recent work has focused on improving system throughput through scheduling. However, none of the prior work has looked into fairness. Yet, guaranteeing that all threads make equal progress on heterogeneous multi-cores is of utmost importance for both multi-threaded and multi-program workloads to improve performance and quality-of-service. Furthermore, modern operating systems affinitize workloads to cores (pinned scheduling) which dramatically affects fairness on heterogeneous multi-cores. In this paper, we propose fairness-aware scheduling for single-ISA heterogeneous multi-cores, and explore two flavors for doing so. Equal-time scheduling runs each thread or workload on each core type for an equal fraction of the time, whereas equal-progress scheduling strives at getting equal amounts of work done on each core type. Our experimental results demonstrate an average 14% (and up to 25%) performance improvement over pinned scheduling through fairness-aware scheduling for homogeneous multi-threaded workloads; equal-progress scheduling improves performance by 32% on average for heterogeneous multi-threaded workloads. Further, we report dramatic improvements in fairness over prior scheduling proposals for multi-program workloads, while achieving system throughput comparable to throughput-optimized scheduling, and an average 21% improvement in throughput over pinned scheduling

    Task Activity Vectors: A Novel Metric for Temperature-Aware and Energy-Efficient Scheduling

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    This thesis introduces the abstraction of the task activity vector to characterize applications by the processor resources they utilize. Based on activity vectors, the thesis introduces scheduling policies for improving the temperature distribution on the processor chip and for increasing energy efficiency by reducing the contention for shared resources of multicore and multithreaded processors

    A Comprehensive Experimental Comparison of Event Driven and Multi-Threaded Sensor Node Operating Systems

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    The capabilities of a sensor network are strongly influenced by the operating system used on the sensor nodes. In general, two different sensor network operating system types are currently considered: event driven and multi-threaded. It is commonly assumed that event driven operating systems are more suited to sensor networks as they use less memory and processing resources. However, if factors other than resource usage are considered important, a multi-threaded system might be preferred. This paper compares the resource needs of multi-threaded and event driven sensor network operating systems. The resources considered are memory usage and power consumption. Additionally, the event handling capabilities of event driven and multi-threaded operating systems are analyzed and compared. The results presented in this paper show that for a number of application areas a thread-based sensor network operating system is feasible and preferable

    Exploring coordinated software and hardware support for hardware resource allocation

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    Multithreaded processors are now common in the industry as they offer high performance at a low cost. Traditionally, in such processors, the assignation of hardware resources between the multiple threads is done implicitly, by the hardware policies. However, a new class of multithreaded hardware allows the explicit allocation of resources to be controlled or biased by the software. Currently, there is little or no coordination between the allocation of resources done by the hardware and the prioritization of tasks done by the software.This thesis targets to narrow the gap between the software and the hardware, with respect to the hardware resource allocation, by proposing a new explicit resource allocation hardware mechanism and novel schedulers that use the currently available hardware resource allocation mechanisms.It approaches the problem in two different types of computing systems: on the high performance computing domain, we characterize the first processor to present a mechanism that allows the software to bias the allocation hardware resources, the IBM POWER5. In addition, we propose the use of hardware resource allocation as a way to balance high performance computing applications. Finally, we propose two new scheduling mechanisms that are able to transparently and successfully balance applications in real systems using the hardware resource allocation. On the soft real-time domain, we propose a hardware extension to the existing explicit resource allocation hardware and, in addition, two software schedulers that use the explicit allocation hardware to improve the schedulability of tasks in a soft real-time system.In this thesis, we demonstrate that system performance improves by making the software aware of the mechanisms to control the amount of resources given to each running thread. In particular, for the high performance computing domain, we show that it is possible to decrease the execution time of MPI applications biasing the hardware resource assignation between threads. In addition, we show that it is possible to decrease the number of missed deadlines when scheduling tasks in a soft real-time SMT system.Postprint (published version

    A New Way to Make Music: Processing Digital Audio in Virtual Reality

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    The work of this project attempts to provide new methods of creating music with technology. The product, Fields, is a functional piece of virtual reality software, providing users an immersive and interactive set of tools used to build and design instruments in a modular manner. Each virtual tool is analogous to musical hardware such as guitar pedals, synthesizers, or samplers, and can be thought of as an effect or instrument on its own. Specific configurations of these virtual audio effects can then be played to produce music, and then even saved by the user to load up and play with at a later time. There are still goals to expand this project, and turn it into something more akin to a professional digital audio workstation, but for the time being it remains a modular synthesizer with nearly limitless configurations in a virtual 3D environment. Included is a developer library, giving users the ability to integrate their own musical software solutions into the virtual environment and expand the work of this project

    CATA: Criticality aware task acceleration for multicore processors

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    Managing criticality in task-based programming models opens a wide range of performance and power optimization opportunities in future manycore systems. Criticality aware task schedulers can benefit from these opportunities by scheduling tasks to the most appropriate cores. However, these schedulers may suffer from priority inversion and static binding problems that limit their expected improvements. Based on the observation that task criticality information can be exploited to drive hardware reconfigurations, we propose a Criticality Aware Task Acceleration (CATA) mechanism that dynamically adapts the computational power of a task depending on its criticality. As a result, CATA achieves significant improvements over a baseline static scheduler, reaching average improvements up to 18.4% in execution time and 30.1% in Energy-Delay Product (EDP) on a simulated 32-core system. The cost of reconfiguring hardware by means of a software-only solution rises with the number of cores due to lock contention and reconfiguration overhead. Therefore, novel architectural support is proposed to eliminate these overheads on future manycore systems. This architectural support minimally extends hardware structures already present in current processors, which allows further improvements in performance with negligible overhead. As a consequence, average improvements of up to 20.4% in execution time and 34.0% in EDP are obtained, outperforming state-of-the-art acceleration proposals not aware of task criticality.This work has been supported by the Spanish Government (grant SEV2015-0493, SEV-2011-00067 of the Severo Ochoa Program), by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (contracts TIN2015-65316, TIN2012-34557, TIN2013-46957-C2-2-P), by Generalitat de Catalunya (contracts 2014-SGR- 1051 and 2014-SGR-1272), by the RoMoL ERC Advanced Grant (GA 321253) and the European HiPEAC Network of Excellence. The Mont-Blanc project receives funding from the EU’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement no 610402 and from the EU’s H2020 Framework Programme (H2020/2014-2020) under grant agreement no 671697. M. Moret´o has been partially supported by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral fellowship number JCI-2012-15047. M. Casas is supported by the Secretary for Universities and Research of the Ministry of Economy and Knowledge of the Government of Catalonia and the Cofund programme of the Marie Curie Actions of the 7th R&D Framework Programme of the European Union (Contract 2013 BP B 00243). E. Castillo has been partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports under grant FPU2012/2254.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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