DocumentCode
2422580
Title
Time-to-Solution and Energy-to-Solution: A Comparison between ARM and Xeon
Author
Padoin, Edson L. ; de Oliveira, Daniel A. G. ; Velho, Pedro ; Navaux, Philippe O A
Author_Institution
Inst. of Inf., Fed. Univ. of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, Brazil
fYear
2012
fDate
24-25 Oct. 2012
Firstpage
48
Lastpage
53
Abstract
Most High Performance Computing (HPC) systems today are known as "power hungry" because they aim at computing speed regardless to energy consumption. Some scientific applications still claim more speed and the community expects to reach exascale by the end of the decade. Nevertheless, to reach exascale we need to search alternatives to cope with energy constraints. A promising step forward in this direction is the usage of low power processors such as ARM. ARM processors target low power consumption in contrast with Xeon that are conventional on HPC aiming at computing speed. This paper presents a comparison between ARM and Xeon to evaluate if ARM is the future building block to HPC. We choose to use time-to-solution, peak power, and energy-to-solution to evaluate both processors from the user\´s perspective. The results point that although ARM having lower peak power, Xeon has still a better tradeoff from the user\´s point-of-view.
Keywords
microprocessor chips; power aware computing; ARM; HPC; Xeon; computing speed; energy constraints; energy consumption; energy-to-solution; high performance computing; power hungry; power processors; time-to-solution; Benchmark testing; Energy consumption; Instruction sets; Performance evaluation; Power demand; ARM processor; Energy-to-Solution; HPC; Time-to-Solution; Xeon processor;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Applications for Multi-Core Architectures (WAMCA), 2012 Third Workshop on
Conference_Location
New York, NY
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5025-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WAMCA.2012.10
Filename
6374752
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