TY - GEN
T1 - Process variation aware thread mapping for chip multiprocessors
AU - Hong, S.
AU - Narayanan, S. H.K.
AU - Kandemir, M.
AU - Özturk, Ö
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - With the increasing scaling of manufacturing technology, process variation is a phenomenon that has become more prevalent. As a result, in the context of Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs) for example, it is possible that identically-designed processor cores on the chip have non-identical peak frequencies and power consumptions. To cope with such a design, each processor can be assumed to run at the frequency of the slowest processor, resulting in wasted computational capability. This paper considers an alternate approach and proposes an algorithm that intelligently maps (and remaps) computations onto available processors so that each processor runs at its peak frequency. In other words, by dynamically changing the thread-to-processor mapping at runtime, our approach allows each processor to maximize its performance, rather than simply using chip-wide lowest frequency amongst all cores and highest cache latency. Experimental evidence shows that, as compared to a process variation agnostic thread mapping strategy, our proposed scheme achieves as much as 29% improvement in overall execution latency, average improvement being 13% over the benchmarks tested. We also demonstrate in this paper that our savings are consistent across different processor counts, latency maps, and latency distributions.With the increasing scaling of manufacturing technology, process variation is a phenomenon that has become more prevalent. As a result, in the context of Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs) for example, it is possible that identically-designed processor cores on the chip have non-identical peak frequencies and power consumptions. To cope with such a design, each processor can be assumed to run at the frequency of the slowest processor, resulting in wasted computational capability. This paper considers an alternate approach and proposes an algorithm that intelligently maps (and remaps) computations onto available processors so that each processor runs at its peak frequency. In other words, by dynamically changing the thread-to-processor mapping at runtime, our approach allows each processor to maximize its performance, rather than simply using chip-wide lowest frequency amongst all cores and highest cache latency. Experimental evidence shows that, as compared to a process variation agnostic thread mapping strategy, our proposed scheme achieves as much as 29% improvement in overall execution latency, average improvement being 13% over the benchmarks tested. We also demonstrate in this paper that our savings are consistent across different processor counts, latency maps, and latency distributions.
AB - With the increasing scaling of manufacturing technology, process variation is a phenomenon that has become more prevalent. As a result, in the context of Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs) for example, it is possible that identically-designed processor cores on the chip have non-identical peak frequencies and power consumptions. To cope with such a design, each processor can be assumed to run at the frequency of the slowest processor, resulting in wasted computational capability. This paper considers an alternate approach and proposes an algorithm that intelligently maps (and remaps) computations onto available processors so that each processor runs at its peak frequency. In other words, by dynamically changing the thread-to-processor mapping at runtime, our approach allows each processor to maximize its performance, rather than simply using chip-wide lowest frequency amongst all cores and highest cache latency. Experimental evidence shows that, as compared to a process variation agnostic thread mapping strategy, our proposed scheme achieves as much as 29% improvement in overall execution latency, average improvement being 13% over the benchmarks tested. We also demonstrate in this paper that our savings are consistent across different processor counts, latency maps, and latency distributions.With the increasing scaling of manufacturing technology, process variation is a phenomenon that has become more prevalent. As a result, in the context of Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs) for example, it is possible that identically-designed processor cores on the chip have non-identical peak frequencies and power consumptions. To cope with such a design, each processor can be assumed to run at the frequency of the slowest processor, resulting in wasted computational capability. This paper considers an alternate approach and proposes an algorithm that intelligently maps (and remaps) computations onto available processors so that each processor runs at its peak frequency. In other words, by dynamically changing the thread-to-processor mapping at runtime, our approach allows each processor to maximize its performance, rather than simply using chip-wide lowest frequency amongst all cores and highest cache latency. Experimental evidence shows that, as compared to a process variation agnostic thread mapping strategy, our proposed scheme achieves as much as 29% improvement in overall execution latency, average improvement being 13% over the benchmarks tested. We also demonstrate in this paper that our savings are consistent across different processor counts, latency maps, and latency distributions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70350045024&partnerID=8YFLogxK
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U2 - 10.1109/date.2009.5090776
DO - 10.1109/date.2009.5090776
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:70350045024
SN - 9783981080155
T3 - Proceedings -Design, Automation and Test in Europe, DATE
SP - 821
EP - 826
BT - Proceedings - 2009 Design, Automation and Test in Europe Conference and Exhibition, DATE '09
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
T2 - 2009 Design, Automation and Test in Europe Conference and Exhibition, DATE '09
Y2 - 20 April 2009 through 24 April 2009
ER -