DocumentCode :
157832
Title :
Dynamic management of TurboMode in modern multi-core chips
Author :
Lo, Daniel ; Kozyrakis, Christos
Author_Institution :
Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fYear :
2014
fDate :
15-19 Feb. 2014
Firstpage :
603
Lastpage :
613
Abstract :
Dynamic overclocking of CPUs, or TurboMode, is a feature recently introduced on all x86 multi-core chips. It leverages thermal and power headroom from idle execution resources to overclock active cores to increase performance. TurboMode can accelerate CPU-bound applications at the cost of additional power consumption. Nevertheless, naive use of TurboMode can significantly increase power consumption without increasing performance. Thus far, there is no strategy for managing TurboMode to optimize its use across all workloads and efficiency metrics. This paper analyzes the impact of TurboMode on a wide range of efficiency metrics (performance, power, cost, and combined metrics such as QPS/W and ED2) for representative server workloads on various hardware configurations. We determine that TurboMode is generally beneficial for performance (up to +24%), cost efficiency (QPS/$ up to +8%), energy-delay product (ED, up to +47%), and energy-delay-squared product (ED2, up to +68%). However, TurboMode is inefficient for workloads that exhibit interference for shared resources. We use this information to build and validate a model that predicts the optimal TurboMode setting for each efficiency metric. We then implement autoturbo, a background daemon that dynamically manages TurboMode in real time without any hardware changes. We demonstrate that autoturbo improves QPS/$, ED, and ED2 by 8%, 47%, and 68% respectively over not using TurboMode. At the same time, autoturbo virtually eliminates all the large drops in those same metrics (-12%, -25%, -25% for QPS/$, ED, and ED2) that occur when TurboMode is used naively (always on).
Keywords :
microprocessor chips; multiprocessing systems; resource allocation; CPU dynamic overclocking; CPU-bound application acceleration; ED2 metrics; QPS-W metrics; TurboMode dynamic management; active core overclocking; background daemon; cost efficiency; efficiency metrics; energy-delay-squared product; hardware changes; hardware configuration; idle execution resources; optimal TurboMode setting; power consumption; power headroom; server workload; shared resources; thermal headroom; x86 multicore chips; Bridges; Clocks; Hardware; Interference; Quality of service; Servers;
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.2014.6835969
Filename :
6835969
Link To Document :
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