A study on polymorphing superscalar processor dynamically to improve power efficiency | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

A study on polymorphing superscalar processor dynamically to improve power efficiency


Abstract:

Asymmetric Multicore Processors (AMP) have emerged as likely candidates to solve the performance/power conundrum in the current generation of processors. Most recent work...Show More

Abstract:

Asymmetric Multicore Processors (AMP) have emerged as likely candidates to solve the performance/power conundrum in the current generation of processors. Most recent work in this area evaluate such multicores by considering large (usually out-of-order (OOO)) and small (usually in-order (InO)) cores on the same chip. Dynamic online swapping of threads between these cores is then facilitated whenever deemed beneficial. However, if threads are swapped too often, the overheads may negatively impact the benefits of swapping. Hence, in most recent work, thread swapping decisions are made at coarse grain instruction granularities, leaving out many opportunities. In this paper, we propose a scheme to mitigate the penalty imposed by thread swapping and yet achieve all the benefits of AMPs. Here, a single superscalar OOO core morphs itself into an InO core at runtime, whenever determined to be performance/Watt efficient. Certain Intel processors already have a similar mechanism to statically morph an OOO core to an InO core to facilitate debug. We extend this existing capability to perform dynamic core morphing at runtime with an orthogonal objective of improving power efficiency. Results indicate that on an average, performance/Watt benefits of 10% can be extracted by our proposed morphing scheme at a very small performance penalty of 3.8%. Since this scheme is based on existing mechanisms readily available in current microprocessors, it incurs no hardware overheads.
Date of Conference: 05-07 August 2013
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 07 November 2013
Electronic ISBN:978-1-4799-1331-2

ISSN Information:

Conference Location: Natal, Brazil

References

References is not available for this document.