DocumentCode
1565583
Title
Profile-based dynamic voltage and frequency scaling for a multiple clock domain microprocessor
Author
Magklis, Grigorios ; Scott, Michael L. ; Semeraro, Greg ; Albonesi, David H. ; Dropsho, Steven
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Rochester Univ., NY, USA
fYear
2003
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
25
Abstract
A Multiple Clock Domain (MCD) processor addresses the challenges of clock distribution and power dissipation by dividing a chip into several (coarse-grained) clock domains, allowing frequency and voltage to be reduced in domains that are not currently on the application\´s critical path. Given a reconfiguration mechanism capable of choosing appropriate times and values for voltage/frequency scaling, an MCD processor has the potential to achieve significant energy savings with low performance degradation. Early work on MCD processors evaluated the potential for energy savings by manually inserting reconfiguration instructions into applications, or by employing an oracle driven by offline analysis of (identical) prior program runs. Subsequent work developed a hardware-based online mechanism that averages 75-85% of the energy-delay improvement achieved via offline analysis. We consider the automatic insertion of reconfiguration instructions into applications, using profile-driven binary rewriting. Profile-based reconfiguration introduces the need for "training runs" prior to production use of a given application, but avoids the hardware complexity of online reconfiguration. It also has the potential to yield significantly greater energy savings. Experimental results (training on small data sets and then running on larger, alternative data sets) indicate that the profile-driven approach is more stable than hardware-based reconfiguration, and yields virtually all of the energy-delay improvement achieved via offline analysis.
Keywords
frequency control; instruction sets; microprocessor chips; power consumption; reconfigurable architectures; synchronisation; voltage control; MCD processor; clock distribution; frequency scaling; multiple clock domain microprocessor; power dissipation; profile-based dynamic voltage scaling; profile-driven reconfiguration; Clocks; Computer science; Costs; Degradation; Dynamic voltage scaling; Frequency conversion; Frequency synchronization; Microprocessors; Potential energy; Power dissipation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Architecture, 2003. Proceedings. 30th Annual International Symposium on
ISSN
1063-6897
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1945-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISCA.2003.1206985
Filename
1206985
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