667,784 research outputs found
Evaluating application vulnerability to soft errors in multi-level cache hierarchy
As the capacity of cache increases dramatically with new processors, soft errors originating in cache has become a major reliability concern for high performance processors. This paper presents application specific soft error vulnerability analysis in order to understand an application's responses to soft errors from different levels of caches. Based on a high-performance processor simulator called Graphite, we have implemented a fault injection framework that can selectively inject bit flips to different levels of caches. We simulated a wide range of relevant bit error patterns and measured the applications' vulnerabilities to bit errors. Our experimental results have shown the various vulnerabilities of applications to bit errors from different levels of caches; the results have also indicated the probabilities of different behaviors from the applications
Avoiding core's DUE & SDC via acoustic wave detectors and tailored error containment and recovery
The trend of downsizing transistors and operating voltage scaling has made the processor chip more sensitive against radiation phenomena making soft errors an important challenge. New reliability techniques for handling soft errors in the logic and memories that allow meeting the desired failures-in-time (FIT) target are key to keep harnessing the benefits of Moore's law. The failure to scale the soft error rate caused by particle strikes, may soon limit the total number of cores that one may have running at the same time. This paper proposes a light-weight and scalable architecture to eliminate silent data corruption errors (SDC) and detected unrecoverable errors (DUE) of a core. The architecture uses acoustic wave detectors for error detection. We propose to recover by confining the errors in the cache hierarchy, allowing us to deal with the relatively long detection latencies. Our results show that the proposed mechanism protects the whole core (logic, latches and memory arrays) incurring performance overhead as low as 0.60%. © 2014 IEEE.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Correcting soft errors online in fast fourier transform
While many algorithm-based fault tolerance (ABFT) schemes have been proposed to detect soft errors offline in the fast Fourier transform (FFT) after computation finishes, none of the existing ABFT schemes detect soft errors online before the computation finishes. This paper presents an online ABFT scheme for FFT so that soft errors can be detected online and the corrupted computation can be terminated in a much more timely manner. We also extend our scheme to tolerate both arithmetic errors and memory errors, develop strategies to reduce its fault tolerance overhead and improve its numerical stability and fault coverage, and finally incorporate it into the widely used FFTW library - one of the today's fastest FFT software implementations. Experimental results demonstrate that: (1) the proposed online ABFT scheme introduces much lower overhead than the existing offline ABFT schemes; (2) it detects errors in a much more timely manner; and (3) it also has higher numerical stability and better fault coverage
A transport coefficient: the electrical conductivity
I describe the lattice determination of the electrical conductivity of the
quark gluon plasma. Since this is the first extraction of a transport
coefficient with a degree of control over errors, I next use this to make
estimates of other transport related quantities using simple kinetic theory
formulae. The resulting estimates are applied to fluctuations, ultra-soft
photon spectra and the viscosity. Dimming of ultra-soft photons is exponential
in the mean free path, and hence is a very sensitive probe of transport.Comment: Talk given in ICPAQGP 2005, SINP, Kolkat
Electroweak Radiative Corrections to Higgs Production via Vector Boson Fusion using Soft-Collinear Effective Theory
Soft-collinear effective theory (SCET) is applied to compute electroweak
radiative corrections to Higgs production via gauge boson fusion, q q -> q q H.
There are several novel features which make this process an interesting
application of SCET. The amplitude is proportional to the Higgs vacuum
expectation value (VEV), and so is not a gauge singlet amplitude. Standard
resummation methods require a gauge singlet operator and do not apply here. The
SCET analysis requires operators with both collinear and soft external fields,
with the Higgs VEV being described by an external soft \phi\ field. There is a
scalar soft-collinear transition operator in the SCET Lagrangian which
contributes to the scattering amplitude, and is derived here.Comment: Waalewijn added as author. Some errors in previous arXiv version
fixed. This version is updated to the published versio
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