DocumentCode :
157786
Title :
QORE: A fault tolerant network-on-chip architecture with power-efficient quad-function channel (QFC) buffers
Author :
DiTomaso, Dominic ; Kodi, Avinash ; Louri, Ahmed
Author_Institution :
Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Ohio Univ., Athens, OH, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
15-19 Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
320
Lastpage :
331
Abstract :
Network-on-Chips (NoCs) are quickly becoming the standard communication paradigm for the growing number of cores on the chip. While NoCs can deliver sufficient bandwidth and enhance scalability, NoCs suffer from high power consumption due to the router microarchitecture and communication channels that facilitate inter-core communication. As technology keeps scaling down in the nanometer regime, unpredictable device behavior due to aging, infant mortality, design defects, soft errors, aggressive design, and process-voltage-temperature variations, will increase and will result in a significant increase in faults (both permanent and transient) and hardware failures. In this paper, we propose QORE - a fault tolerant NoC architecture with Quad-Function Channel (QFC) buffers. The use of QFC buffers and their associated control (link and fault controllers) enhance fault-tolerance by allowing the NoC to dynamically adapt to faults at the link level and reverse propagation direction to avoid faulty links. Additionally, QFC buffers reduce router power and improve performance by eliminating in-router buffering. Our simulation results using real benchmarks and synthetic traffic mixes show that QORE improves speedup by 1.3× and throughput by 2.3× when compared to state-of-the art fault tolerant NoCs designs such as Ariadne and Vicis. Moreover, using Synopsys Design Compiler, we also show that network power in QORE is reduced by 21% with minimal control overhead.
Keywords :
buffer circuits; fault tolerant computing; integrated circuit design; network routing; network-on-chip; QFC buffers; QORE; associated control; bandwidth; communication channel; device behavior; fault controller; fault tolerant NoC architecture; fault tolerant NoC design; fault tolerant network-on-chip architecture; fault-tolerance; faulty link; hardware failure; in-router buffering; intercore communication; network power; power consumption; power-efficient quad-function channel buffer; reverse propagation direction; router microarchitecture; router power; standard communication paradigm; synopsys design compiler; synthetic traffic mixes; Bandwidth; Buffer storage; Fault tolerance; Fault tolerant systems; Logic gates; Transistors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
High Performance Computer Architecture (HPCA), 2014 IEEE 20th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HPCA.2014.6835942
Filename :
6835942
Link To Document :
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