Mechanisms for Parallelism Specialization for the DySER Architecture

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Date
2012-06-13Author
Sankaralingam, Karthikeyan
Nowatzki, Tony
Ho, Chen-Han
Govindaraju, Venkatraraman
Publisher
University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Computer Sciences
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Show full item recordAbstract
Specialization is a promising direction for improving processor energy efficiency. With functionality
specialization, hardware is designed for application-specific units of computation. With parallelism
specialization, hardware is designed to exploit abundant data-level parallelism. The hardware for these
specialization approaches have similarities including many functional units and the elimination of per-instruction
overheads. Even so, previous architectures have focused on only one form of specialization.
Our goal is to develop mechanisms that unify these two approaches into a single architecture. We develop
the DySER architecture to support both, by Dynamically Specializing Execution Resources to
match program regions. By dynamically specializing frequently executing regions, and applying a set
of judiciously chosen parallelism mechanisms--namely region growing, vectorized communication, and
region virtualization--we show DySER provides efficient functionality and parallelism specialization.
It outperforms an OOO-CPU, SSE-acceleration, and GPU-acceleration by up to 4.1x, 4.7x and 4x respectively,
while consuming 9%, 86%, and 8% less energy. Our full-system FPGA prototype of DySER
integrated into OpenSPARC demonstrates an implementation is practical.
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/61817Type
Technical Report
Citation
TR1773
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