Author:
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Jha, Sudhanshu Shekhar; Heirman, Wim; Falcón Samper, Ayose Jesus; Carlson, Trevor E.; Van Craeynest, Kenzo; Tubella Murgadas, Jordi; González Colás, Antonio María; Eeckhout, Lieven
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Abstract:
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Modern microprocessors are increasingly power-constrained as a result of slowed supply voltage scaling (end of Dennard scaling) in conjunction with the transistor density scaling (Moore's Law). Existing many-core power management techniques such as chip-wide/per-core DVFS, and core and cache adaptation are quite effective in isolation at moderate to high power budgets. However, for future many-core chip, the existing techniques do not scale well to large core counts, small time slices and stringent power budgets. We need a new solution that combines different adaptation and reconfiguration techniques. In this paper, we present Chrysso, an integrated, scalable and low-overhead power management framework. Chrysso consists of a three-step process: leveraging simple analytical performance and power models, pruning the search space early using local Pareto front generation, followed by global utility-based power allocation. This ensures scalable and effective dynamic adaptation of many-core processors at short time scales along multiple axes, including core, cache and per-core DVFS adaptations. By integrating multiple power management techniques into a common methodology, Chrysso provides significant performance improvements over isolated mechanisms within a given power budget without power-gating cores. On a 64-core system, Chrysso improves system throughput by 1.6× and 1.9× over core-gating at stringent power envelops for multi-program (SPEC)
and multi-threaded (PARSEC) workloads, respectively. |