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Thermal-aware Task Mapping on Dynamically Reconfigurable Network-on-Chip based Multiprocessor System-on-Chip

Authors :
Liu, Weichen
Yang, Lei
Jiang, Weiwen
Feng, Liang
Guan, Nan
Zhang, Wei
Dutt, Nikil
Liu, Weichen
Yang, Lei
Jiang, Weiwen
Feng, Liang
Guan, Nan
Zhang, Wei
Dutt, Nikil
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Dark silicon is the phenomenon that a fraction of many-core chip has to be turned off or run in a low-power state in order to maintain the safe chip temperature. System-level thermal management techniques normally map application on non-adjacent cores, while communication efficiency among these cores will be oppositely affected over conventional network-on-chip (NoC). Recently, SMART NoC architecture is proposed, enabling single-cycle multi-hop bypass channels to be built between distant cores at runtime, to reduce communication latency. However, communication efficiency of SMART NoC will be diminished by communication contention, which will in turn decrease system performance. In this paper, we first propose an Integer-Linear Programming (ILP) model to properly address communication problem, which generates the optimal solutions with the consideration of inter-processor communication. We further present a novel heuristic algorithm for task mapping in dark silicon many-core systems, called TopoMap, on top of SMART architecture, which can effectively solve communication contention problem in polynomial time. With fine-grained consideration of chip thermal reliability and inter-processor communication, presented approaches are able to control the reconfigurability of NoC communication topology in task mapping and scheduling. Thermal-safe system is guaranteed by physically decentralized active cores, and communication overhead is reduced by the minimized communication contention and maximized bypass routing. Performance evaluation on PARSEC shows the applicability and effectiveness of the proposed techniques, which achieve on average 42.5 and 32.4 percent improvement in communication and application performance, and 32.3 percent reduction in system energy consumption, compared with state-of-the-art techniques. TopoMap only introduces 1.8 percent performance difference compared to ILP model and is more scalable to large-size NoCs. © 1968-2012 IEEE.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1331248592
Document Type :
Electronic Resource