DocumentCode :
2403647
Title :
Razor: a low-power pipeline based on circuit-level timing speculation
Author :
Ernst, Dan ; Kim, Nam Sung ; Das, Shidhartha ; Pant, Sanjay ; Rao, Rajeev ; Pham, Toan ; Ziesler, Conrad ; Blaauw, David ; Austin, Todd ; Flautner, Krisztian ; Mudge, Trevor
Author_Institution :
Adv. Comput. Archit. Lab., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fYear :
2003
fDate :
3-5 Dec. 2003
Firstpage :
7
Lastpage :
18
Abstract :
With increasing clock frequencies and silicon integration, power aware computing has become a critical concern in the design of embedded processors and systems-on-chip. One of the more effective and widely used methods for power-aware computing is dynamic voltage scaling (DVS). In order to obtain the maximum power savings from DVS, it is essential to scale the supply voltage as low as possible while ensuring correct operation of the processor. The critical voltage is chosen such that under a worst-case scenario of process and environmental variations, the processor always operates correctly. However, this approach leads to a very conservative supply voltage since such a worst-case combination of different variabilities is very rare. In this paper, we propose a new approach to DVS, called Razor, based on dynamic detection and correction of circuit timing errors. The key idea of Razor is to tune the supply voltage by monitoring the error rate during circuit operation, thereby eliminating the need for voltage margins and exploiting the data dependence of circuit delay. A Razor flip-flop is introduced that double-samples pipeline stage values, once with a fast clock and again with a time-borrowing delayed clock. A metastability-tolerant comparator then validates latch values sampled with the fast clock. In the event of timing error, a modified pipeline mispeculation recovery mechanism restores correct program state. A prototype Razor pipeline was designed in a 0.18 μm technology and was analyzed. Razor energy overhead during normal operation is limited to 3.1%. Analyses of a full-custom multiplier and a SPICE-level Kogge-Stone adder model reveal that substantial energy savings are possible for these devices (up to 64.2%) with little impact on performance due to error recovery (less than 3%).
Keywords :
comparators (circuits); flip-flops; logic design; low-power electronics; pipeline processing; system-on-chip; timing circuits; 0.18 microns; Razor; SPICE-level Kogge-Stone adder model; circuit delay; circuit timing errors; circuit-level timing speculation; clock frequencies; critical voltage; data dependence; double-samples pipeline stage; dymanic correction; dynamic detection; dynamic voltage scaling; embedded processors; environmental variations; error rate monitoring; error recovery; full-custom multiplier; low-power pipeline; maximum power savings; metastability-tolerant comparator; pipeline mispeculation recovery mechanism; power aware computing; process variations; program state; silicon integration; supply voltage; systems-on-chip design; time-borrowing delayed clock; voltage margins; Clocks; Delay; Dynamic voltage scaling; Error correction; Frequency; Pipelines; Silicon; Timing; Tuned circuits; Voltage control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microarchitecture, 2003. MICRO-36. Proceedings. 36th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2043-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MICRO.2003.1253179
Filename :
1253179
Link To Document :
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