• DocumentCode
    1574051
  • Title

    Custom-fit processors: letting applications define architectures

  • Author

    Fisher, Joseph A. ; Faraboschi, Paolo ; Desoli, Giuseppe

  • Author_Institution
    Hewlett-Packard Labs., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • fYear
    1996
  • Firstpage
    324
  • Lastpage
    335
  • Abstract
    In this paper we report on a system which automatically designs realistic VLIW architectures highly optimized for one given application (the input for this system), while running all other code correctly. The system uses a product-quality compiler that generates very aggressive VLIW code. We retarget the compiler until we have found a VLIW architecture idealized for the application on the basis of performance, a cost function and a hardware budget. We show that we can automatically select architectures that achieve large speedups on color and image processing codes. Specialization is shown to be very valuable: The differences between architectural choices, even among reasonable-seeming architectures having similar costs, can be very great, often a factor of 5 (and sometimes much more). We show also that specialization is also very dangerous. A reasonable choice of architecture to fit one algorithm can be a very poor choice for another even in the same domain. There is sometimes an architecture, near in cost and performance to the best, that does much better on a second algorithm
  • Keywords
    parallel architectures; special purpose computers; VLIW architectures; custom-fit processors; product-quality compiler; specialization; Color; Cost function; Design optimization; Hardware; Laboratories; Microprocessors; Process design; Silicon; VLIW; Very large scale integration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Microarchitecture, 1996. MICRO-29.Proceedings of the 29th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Paris
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-7641-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/MICRO.1996.566472
  • Filename
    566472