DocumentCode :
1340770
Title :
Cache Latency Control for Application Fairness or Differentiation in Power-Constrained Chip Multiprocessors
Author :
Wang, Xiaorui ; Ma, Kai ; Wang, Yefu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH, USA
Volume :
61
Issue :
10
fYear :
2012
Firstpage :
1371
Lastpage :
1385
Abstract :
Limiting the peak power consumption of chip multiprocessors (CMPs) has recently received a lot of attention. In order to enable chip-level power capping, the peak power consumption of last-level (e.g., L2) on-chip caches in a CMP often needs to be constrained by dynamically transitioning selected cache banks into low-power modes. However, dynamic cache resizing for power capping may cause undesired long cache access latencies, and even thread starving and thrashing, for the applications running on the CMP. In this paper, we propose a novel cache management strategy that can limit the peak power consumption of L2 caches and provide fairness guarantees, such that the cache access latencies of the application threads coscheduled on the CMP are impacted more uniformly. Our strategy is also extended to provide differentiated cache latency guarantees that can help the OS to enforce the desired thread priorities at the architectural level and achieve desired rates of thread progress for coscheduled applications. Our solution features a two-tier control architecture rigorously designed based on advanced feedback control theory for guaranteed control accuracy and system stability. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that our solution can achieve the desired cache power capping, fair or differentiated cache sharing, and power-performance tradeoffs for many applications.
Keywords :
cache storage; microprocessor chips; multiprocessing systems; storage management; application fairness; cache access latency; cache banks; cache latency control; cache management strategy; cache power capping; chip level power capping; control accuracy; differentiated cache sharing; differentiation; dynamic cache resizing; feedback control theory; low power mode; peak power consumption; power constrained chip multiprocessors; power performance; system stability; thread starving; two tier control architecture; Adaptation models; Control systems; Instruction sets; Mathematical model; Power control; Power demand; Runtime; Power capping; cache latency; chip multiprocessors.; control theory; fairness; performance differentiation;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Computers, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9340
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TC.2011.187
Filename :
6035677
Link To Document :
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