Title :
Bundling: reducing the overhead of multiprocessor prefetchers
Author :
Wallin, Dan ; Hagersten, Erik
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Technol., Uppsala Univ., Sweden
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Prefetching has proven to be a useful technique for reducing cache misses in multiprocessors at the cost of increased coherence traffic. This is especially trouble some for snoop-based systems, where the available coherence bandwidth often is the scalability bottleneck. The bundling technique reduces the overhead caused by prefetching in two ways: piggybacking prefetches with normal requests, and requiring only one device to perform the snoop lookup for each prefetch transaction. This can reduce both the address bandwidth and the number of snoop lookups compared with a nonprefetching system. We describe bundling implementations for two important transaction types: reads and upgrades. While bundling could reduce the overhead of most existing prefetch schemes, the evaluation of bundling performed has been limited to two of them: sequential prefetching and Dahlgren´s adaptive sequential prefetching. Both schemes have their snoop bandwidth halved for all commercial and scientific benchmarks in the study. The combined effect of bundling applied to these prefetch schemes lowers the cache miss rate, the address bandwidth and the snoop bandwidth, compared with a system with no prefetching, for all applications. Bundling, will not reduce the data bandwidth introduced by a prefetch scheme. However, we argue that the data bandwidth is more easily scaled than the snoop bandwidth for snoop-based coherence systems.
Keywords :
cache storage; multiprocessing systems; Dahlgren adaptive sequential prefetching; bundling technique; cache miss; coherence bandwidth; data bandwidth; multiprocessor prefetching; nonprefetching system; piggybacking prefetche; sequential prefetching; snoop-based coherence systems; snoop-based systems; Bandwidth; Costs; Distributed processing; Information technology; Performance evaluation; Prefetching; Proposals; Protocols; Scalability; Telecommunication traffic;
Conference_Titel :
Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, 2004. Proceedings. 18th International
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2132-0
DOI :
10.1109/IPDPS.2004.1303006