Title :
Empirical model for cooperative resizing of processor structures to exploit power-performance efficiency at runtime
Author :
Khan, Omar ; Kundu, Sandipan
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA
Abstract :
Power consumption has become a major cause of concern spanning from data centres to handheld devices. Traditionally, improvement in power-performance efficiency of a modern superscalar processor came from technology scaling. However, that is no longer the case. Many of the current systems deploy coarse grain voltage and/or frequency scaling for power management. These techniques are attractive, but limited because of their granularity of control and effectiveness in nano-complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technologies. This study proposes a novel architecture-level mechanism to exploit intra-thread variations for power-performance efficiency in modern superscalar processors. This class of processors implement several buffer/queue structures to support speculative out-of-order execution for performance enhancement. Applications may not need full capabilities of such structures at all times. A mechanism that collaboratively adapts a finite set of key hardware structures to the changing programme behaviour can allow the processor to operate with heterogeneous power-performance capabilities. This study presents a novel offline regression-based empirical model to estimate structure resizing for a selected set of structures. It is shown that using a few processor runtime events, the system can dynamically estimate structure resizing to exploit power-performance efficiency. Results show that using the proposed empirical model, a selective set of key structures can be resized at runtime to deliver on average 40% power-performance efficiency over a baseline design, with only 5% loss of performance.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; computer centres; integrated circuit modelling; nanoelectronics; regression analysis; CMOS technology; architecture-level mechanism; buffer structures; cooperative resizing; data centres; frequency scaling; handheld devices; heterogeneous power-performance capability; intrathread variations; nanocomplementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology; offline regression-based empirical model; power consumption; power management; power-performance efficiency; processor structures; queue structures; structure resizing; superscalar processor;
Journal_Title :
Circuits, Devices & Systems, IET
DOI :
10.1049/iet-cds.2011.0354