Modular and Distributed Management of Many-Core SoCs

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Marcelo Ruaro ◽  
Anderson Sant’ana ◽  
Axel Jantsch ◽  
Fernando Gehm Moraes

Many-Core Systems-on-Chip increasingly require Dynamic Multi-objective Management (DMOM) of resources. DMOM uses different management components for objectives and resources to implement comprehensive and self-adaptive system resource management. DMOMs are challenging because they require a scalable and well-organized framework to make each component modular, allowing it to be instantiated or redesigned with a limited impact on other components. This work evaluates two state-of-the-art distributed management paradigms and, motivated by their drawbacks, proposes a new one called Management Application (MA) , along with a DMOM framework based on MA. MA is a distributed application, specific for management, where each task implements a management role. This paradigm favors scalability and modularity because the management design assumes different and parallel modules, decoupled from the OS. An experiment with a task mapping case study shows that MA reduces the overhead of management resources (-61.5%), latency (-66%), and communication volume (-96%) compared to state-of-the-art per-application management. Compared to cluster-based management (CBM) implemented directly as part of the OS, MA is similar in resources and communication volume, increasing only the mapping latency (+16%). Results targeting a complete DMOM control loop addressing up to three different objectives show the scalability regarding system size and adaptation frequency compared to CBM, presenting an overall management latency reduction of 17.2% and an overall monitoring messages’ latency reduction of 90.2%.

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 183
Author(s):  
Jose Ricardo Gomez-Rodriguez ◽  
Remberto Sandoval-Arechiga ◽  
Salvador Ibarra-Delgado ◽  
Viktor Ivan Rodriguez-Abdala ◽  
Jose Luis Vazquez-Avila ◽  
...  

Current computing platforms encourage the integration of thousands of processing cores, and their interconnections, into a single chip. Mobile smartphones, IoT, embedded devices, desktops, and data centers use Many-Core Systems-on-Chip (SoCs) to exploit their compute power and parallelism to meet the dynamic workload requirements. Networks-on-Chip (NoCs) lead to scalable connectivity for diverse applications with distinct traffic patterns and data dependencies. However, when the system executes various applications in traditional NoCs—optimized and fixed at synthesis time—the interconnection nonconformity with the different applications’ requirements generates limitations in the performance. In the literature, NoC designs embraced the Software-Defined Networking (SDN) strategy to evolve into an adaptable interconnection solution for future chips. However, the works surveyed implement a partial Software-Defined Network-on-Chip (SDNoC) approach, leaving aside the SDN layered architecture that brings interoperability in conventional networking. This paper explores the SDNoC literature and classifies it regarding the desired SDN features that each work presents. Then, we described the challenges and opportunities detected from the literature survey. Moreover, we explain the motivation for an SDNoC approach, and we expose both SDN and SDNoC concepts and architectures. We observe that works in the literature employed an uncomplete layered SDNoC approach. This fact creates various fertile areas in the SDNoC architecture where researchers may contribute to Many-Core SoCs designs.


2015 ◽  
Vol 64 (11) ◽  
pp. 3197-3209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juri Ranieri ◽  
Alessandro Vincenzi ◽  
Amina Chebira ◽  
David Atienza ◽  
Martin Vetterli

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (7) ◽  
pp. 1905-1918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Yang ◽  
Weichen Liu ◽  
Weiwen Jiang ◽  
Mengquan Li ◽  
Peng Chen ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Michael Dimopoulos ◽  
Yi Gang ◽  
Mounir Benabdenbi ◽  
Lorena Anghel ◽  
Nacer-Eddine Zergainoh ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 61 (9) ◽  
pp. 2663-2676 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Diversi ◽  
Andrea Tilli ◽  
Andrea Bartolini ◽  
Francesco Beneventi ◽  
Luca Benini

Author(s):  
Carsten Heinz ◽  
Jaco Hofmann ◽  
Jens Korinth ◽  
Lukas Sommer ◽  
Lukas Weber ◽  
...  

AbstractThe integration of FPGA-based accelerators into a complete heterogeneous system is a challenging task faced by many researchers and engineers, especially now that FPGAs enjoy increasing popularity as implementation platforms for efficient, application-specific accelerators for domains such as signal processing, machine learning and intelligent storage. To lighten the burden of system integration from the developers of accelerators, the open-source TaPaSCo framework presented in this work provides an automated toolflow for the construction of heterogeneous many-core architectures from custom processing elements, and a simple, uniform programming interface to utilize spatially distributed, parallel computation on FPGAs. TaPaSCo aims to increase the scalability and portability of FPGA designs through automated design space exploration, greatly simplifying the scaling of hardware designs and facilitating iterative growth and portability across FPGA devices and families. This work describes TaPaSCo with its primary design abstractions and shows how TaPaSCo addresses portability and extensibility of FPGA hardware designs for systems-on-chip. A study of successful projects using TaPaSCo shows its versatility and can serve as inspiration and reference for future users, with more details on the usage of TaPaSCo presented in an in-depth case study and a short overview of the workflow.


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