Title :
Enabling Realistic Fine-Grain Voltage Scaling with Reconfigurable Power Distribution Networks
Author :
Godycki, Waclaw ; Torng, Christopher ; Bukreyev, Ivan ; Apsel, Alyssa ; Batten, Christopher
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY, USA
Abstract :
Recent work has shown that monolithic integration of voltage regulators will be feasible in the near future, enabling reduced system cost and the potential for fine-grain voltage scaling (FGVS). More specifically, on-chip switched-capacitor regulators appear to offer an attractive trade-off in terms of integration complexity, power density, power efficiency, and response time. In this paper, we use architecture-level modeling to explore a new dynamic voltage/frequency scaling controller called the fine-grain synchronization controller (FG-SYNC+). FG-SYNC+ enables improved performance and energy efficiency at similar average power for multithreaded applications with activity imbalance. We then use circuit-level modeling to explore various approaches to organizing on-chip voltage regulation, including a new approach called reconfigurable power distribution networks (RPDNs). RPDNs allow one regulator to "borrow" energy storage from regulators associated with underutilized cores resulting in improved area/power efficiency and faster response times. We evaluate FG-SYNC+ and RPDN using a vertically integrated research methodology, and our results demonstrate a 10-50% performance and 10-70% energy-efficiency improvement on the majority of the applications studied compared to no FGVS, yet RPDN uses 40% less area compared to a more traditional per-core regulation scheme.
Keywords :
distribution networks; energy conservation; multi-threading; power aware computing; switched capacitor networks; system-on-chip; voltage regulators; FG-SYNC+; FGVS; RPDN; activity imbalance; architecture-level modeling; area-power efficiency; circuit-level modeling; dynamic voltage-frequency scaling controller; energy efficiency; fine-grain synchronization controller; integration complexity; multithreaded applications; on-chip switched-capacitor regulators; on-chip voltage regulation; power density; power efficiency; realistic fine-grain voltage scaling; reconfigurable power distribution networks; response time; system-on-chip; vertically integrated research methodology; voltage regulator monolithic integration; Regulators; Switches; Synchronization; System-on-chip; Time factors; Time-frequency analysis; Voltage control; DVFS; on-chip voltage regulation; power distribution networks;
Conference_Titel :
Microarchitecture (MICRO), 2014 47th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Cambridge
DOI :
10.1109/MICRO.2014.52