DocumentCode :
610946
Title :
Boosting Memory Performance of Many-Core FPGA Device through Dynamic Precedence Graph
Author :
Yu Bai ; Fuentes, Abigail ; Riera, Michael ; Alawad, Mohammed ; Mingjie Lin
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
28-30 April 2013
Firstpage :
21
Lastpage :
24
Abstract :
Emerging FPGA device, integrated with abundant RAM blocks and high-performance processor cores, offers an unprecedented opportunity to effectively implement single-chip distributed logic-memory (DLM) architectures [1]. Being “memory-centric”, the DLM architecture can significantly improve the overall performance and energy efficiency of many memory-intensive embedded applications, especially those that exhibit irregular array data access patterns at algorithmic level. However, implementing DLM architecture poses unique challenges to an FPGA designer in terms of 1) organizing and partitioning diverse on-chip memory resources, and 2) orchestrating effective data transmission between on-chip and off-chip memory. In this paper, we offer our solutions to both of these challenges. Specifically, 1) we propose a stochastic memory partitioning scheme based on the well-known simulated annealing algorithm. It obtains memory partitioning solutions that promote parallelized memory accesses by exploring large solution space; 2) we augment the proposed DLM architecture with a reconfigure hardware graph that can dynamically compute precedence relationship between memory partitions, thus effectively exploiting algorithmic level memory parallelism on a per-application basis. We evaluate the effectiveness of our approach (A3) against two other DLM architecture synthesizing methods: an algorithmic-centric reconfigurable computing architectures with a single monolithic memory (A1) and the heterogeneous distributed architectures synthesized according to [1] (A2). To make our comparison fair, in all three architectures, the data path remains the same while local memory architecture differs. For each of ten benchmark applications from SPEC2006 and MiBench [2], we break down the performance benefit of using A3 into two parts: the portion due to stochastic local memory partitioning and the portion due to the dynamic graph-based memory arbitration. All experiments have been c- nducted with a Virtex-5 (XCV5LX155T-2) FPGA. On average, our experimental results show that our proposed A3 architecture outperforms A2 and A1 by 34% and 250%, respectively. Within the performance improvement of A3 over A2, more than 70% improvement comes from the hardware graph-based memory scheduling.
Keywords :
field programmable gate arrays; graph theory; logic design; multiprocessing systems; parallel memories; performance evaluation; processor scheduling; reconfigurable architectures; simulated annealing; DLM architecture; MiBench; RAM blocks; SPEC2006; Virtex-5 FPGA; XCV5LX155T-2 FPGA; algorithmic level memory parallelism; algorithmic-centric reconfigurable computing architectures; diverse on-chip memory resource organization; diverse on-chip memory resource partition; dynamic graph-based memory arbitration; dynamic precedence graph; energy efficiency improvement; hardware graph-based memory scheduling; heterogeneous distributed architectures; high-performance processor cores; irregular array data access patterns; many-core FPGA device; memory performance boosting; memory-centric; overall performance improvement; parallelized memory accesses; simulated annealing algorithm; single monolithic memory; single-chip distributed logic-memory architectures; stochastic memory partitioning scheme; Computer architecture; Field programmable gate arrays; Hardware; Heuristic algorithms; Parallel processing; Partitioning algorithms; Random access memory; FPGA; Precedence Graph;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Field-Programmable Custom Computing Machines (FCCM), 2013 IEEE 21st Annual International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6005-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FCCM.2013.39
Filename :
6545989
Link To Document :
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