Title :
Thermal management of manycore systems with silicon-photonic networks
Author :
Tiansheng Zhang ; Abellan, Jose L. ; Joshi, Akanksha ; Coskun, Ayse K.
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng. Dept., Boston Univ., Boston, MA, USA
Abstract :
Silicon-photonic network-on-chips (NoCs) provide high bandwidth density; therefore, they are promising candidates to replace electrical NoCs in manycore systems. The silicon-photonic NoCs, however, are sensitive to the temperature gradients that typically occur on the chip, and hence, require proactive thermal management. This paper first provides a design space exploration of silicon-photonic networks in manycore systems and quantifies the performance impact of the temperature gradients for various network bandwidths. The paper then introduces a novel job allocation technique that minimizes the temperature gradients among the ring modulators/filters to improve the application performance. Experimental results for a single-chip 256-core system demonstrate that our policy is able to maintain the maximum network bandwidth. Compared to existing workload allocation policies, the proposed policy improves system performance by up to 26.1% when running a single application and 18.3% for multi-program scenarios.
Keywords :
integrated circuit design; integrated optoelectronics; network-on-chip; optical interconnections; thermal management (packaging); bandwidth density; design space exploration; many-core system; manycore systems; maximum network bandwidth; network-on-chip; ring modulators; silicon photonic networks; temperature gradients; thermal management; Bandwidth; Benchmark testing; Ocean temperature; Optical waveguides; Photonics; Resource management; Thermal management;
Conference_Titel :
Design, Automation and Test in Europe Conference and Exhibition (DATE), 2014
Conference_Location :
Dresden
DOI :
10.7873/DATE.2014.320