The end of Dennard scaling has pushed power consumption into a first order
concern for current systems, on par with performance. As a result,
near-threshold voltage computing (NTVC) has been proposed as a potential means
to tackle the limited cooling capacity of CMOS technology. Hardware operating
in NTV consumes significantly less power, at the cost of lower frequency, and
thus reduced performance, as well as increased error rates. In this paper, we
investigate if a low-power systems-on-chip, consisting of ARM's asymmetric
big.LITTLE technology, can be an alternative to conventional high performance
multicore processors in terms of power/energy in an unreliable scenario. For
our study, we use the Conjugate Gradient solver, an algorithm representative of
the computations performed by a large range of scientific and engineering
codes.Comment: Presented at HiPEAC EEHCO '15, 6 page