Distributed Task Migration in a Homogeneous Many-Core System for Leakage and Fan Power Reduction

2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 550-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Ge ◽  
Yukan Zhang ◽  
Qinru Qiu
Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1980
Author(s):  
Mohammed Sultan Mohammed ◽  
Ali A. M. Al-Kubati ◽  
Norlina Paraman ◽  
Ab Al-Hadi Ab Rahman ◽  
M. N. Marsono

Future many-core systems need to handle high power density and chip temperature effectively. Some cores in many-core systems need to be turned off or ‘dark’ to manage chip power and thermal density. This phenomenon is also known as the dark silicon problem. This problem prevents many-core systems from utilizing and gaining improved performance from a large number of processing cores. This paper presents a dynamic thermal-aware performance optimization of dark silicon many-core systems (DTaPO) technique for optimizing dark silicon a many-core system performance under temperature constraint. The proposed technique utilizes both task migration and dynamic voltage frequency scaling (DVFS) for optimizing the performance of a many-core system while keeping system temperature in a safe operating limit. Task migration puts hot cores in low-power states and moves tasks to cooler dark cores to aggressively reduce chip temperature while maintaining high overall system performance. To reduce task migration overhead due to cold start, the source core (i.e., active core) keeps its L2 cache content during the initial migration phase. The destination core (i.e., dark core) can access it to reduce the impact of cold start misses. Moreover, the proposed technique limits tasks migration among cores that share the last level cache (LLC). In the case of major thermal violation and no cooler cores being available, DVFS is used to reduce the hot cores temperature gradually by reducing their frequency. Experimental results for different threshold temperatures show that DTaPO can keep the average system temperature below the thermal limit. Affirmatively, the execution time penalty is reduced by up to 18% compared with using only DVFS for all thermal thresholds. Moreover, the average peak temperature is reduced by up to 10.8°C. In addition, the experimental results show that DTaPO improves the system’s performance by up to 80% compared to optimal sprinting patterns (OSP) and reduces the temperature by up to 13.6°C.


Author(s):  
Anuja A. Tapase ◽  
Siddheshwar V. Patil ◽  
Dinesh B. Kulkarni

2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (03) ◽  
pp. 1750037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaofeng Zhou ◽  
Lu Liu ◽  
Zhangming Zhu

Network-on-Chip (NoC) has become a promising design methodology for the modern on-chip communication infrastructure of many-core system. To guarantee the reliability of traffic, effective fault-tolerant scheme is critical to NoC systems. In this paper, we propose a fault-tolerant deflection routing (FTDR) to address faults on links and router by redundancy technique. The proposed FTDR employs backup links and a redundant fault-tolerant unit (FTU) at router-level to sustain the traffic reliability of NoC. Experimental results show that the proposed FTDR yields an improvement of routing performance and fault-tolerant capability over the reported fault-tolerant routing schemes in average flit deflection rate, average packet latency, saturation throughput and reliability by up to 13.5%, 9.8%, 10.6% and 17.5%, respectively. The layout area and power consumption are increased merely 3.5% and 2.6%.


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