Architectural Contesting
This paper presents results showing that workload behavior tends to vary considerably at granularities of less than a thousand instructions. If it were possible to adjust the microarchitecture to suit the workload behavior at such rates, significant single-thread performance enhancement would be ach...
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Format: | Tagungsbericht |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper presents results showing that workload behavior tends to vary considerably at granularities of less than a thousand instructions. If it were possible to adjust the microarchitecture to suit the workload behavior at such rates, significant single-thread performance enhancement would be achievable. However, previous techniques are too sluggish to be able to effectively respond to such fine-grain change. An approach is proposed that exploits the multi-core trend to enable swift adjustment in the employed microarchitecture upon variation in workload behavior. A number of cores that are each custom-designed for optimum performance under a class of workloads concurrently execute code in a leader-follower arrangement. In this manner, effective execution automatically and fluidly transfers to the most suitable microarchitecture as the workload behavior varies. We refer to this approach as architectural contesting. Two-way contesting yields an average speedup of 15% (maximum speedup of 25%) over a benchmark's own customized core. The paper also explores the interplay between contesting and the number of core types available in the heterogeneous multi-core. This exposes the broader issue of constrained heterogeneous multi-core design and how it influences, and may be influenced by, contesting. |
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ISSN: | 1530-0897 2378-203X |
DOI: | 10.1109/HPCA.2009.4798254 |