Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Eng., Sharif Univ. of Technol., Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
In this paper, we propose a new architecture for nanophotonic Networks on Chip (NoC), named 2D-HERT, which consists of optical data and control planes. The proposed data plane is built upon a new topology and all-optical switches that passively route optical data streams based on their wavelengths. Utilizing wavelength routing method, the proposed deterministic routing algorithm, and Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) technique, the proposed data plane eliminates the need for optical resource reservation at the intermediate nodes. For resolving end-point contention, we propose an all-optical request-grant arbitration architecture which reduces optical losses compared to the alternative arbitration schemes. By performing a series of simulations, we study the efficiency of the proposed architecture, its power and energy consumption, and the data transmission delay. Moreover, we compare the proposed architecture with electrical NoCs and alternative optical NoCs under various synthetic traffic patterns. Averaged across different traffic patterns, 2D-HERT reduces data transmission delay by 24, 15, 18, 4, and 70 percent and achieves average per-packet power reduction of 58, 47, 52, 45, and 95 percent over Phastlane, Firefly, Corona architecture, λ-router, and electrical Torus, respectively.
Keywords :
computer architecture; nanophotonics; network routing; network-on-chip; optical switches; power aware computing; wavelength division multiplexing; λ-router; 2D-HERT; Corona architecture; Firefly architecture; Phastlane architecture; WDM; all-optical request-grant arbitration architecture; all-optical switches; all-optical wavelength-routed architecture; control planes; data transmission delay; deterministic routing algorithm; electrical NoC; electrical torus; end-point contention; nanophotonic networks on chip; optical NoC; optical data streams; optical losses; optical resource reservation; per-packet power reduction; power-efficient network on chip; synthetic traffic patterns; wavelength division multiplexing technique; wavelength routing method; Computer architecture; Network topology; Optical modulation; Optical resonators; Optical switches; Routing; Topology; Interconnection architectures; emerging technologies; low-power design; network architecture and design;