DocumentCode
1343849
Title
A survey of design techniques for system-level dynamic power management
Author
Benini, Luca ; Bogliolo, Alessandro ; De Micheli, Giovanni
Author_Institution
Dipt. di Elettronica, Inf. e Sistemistica, Bologna Univ., Italy
Volume
8
Issue
3
fYear
2000
fDate
6/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
299
Lastpage
316
Abstract
Dynamic power management (DPM) is a design methodology for dynamically reconfiguring systems to provide the requested services and performance levels with a minimum number of active components or a minimum load on such components. DPM encompasses a set of techniques that achieves energy-efficient computation by selectively turning off (or reducing the performance of) system components when they are idle (or partially unexploited). In this paper, we survey several approaches to system-level dynamic power management. We first describe how systems employ power-manageable components and how the use of dynamic reconfiguration can impact the overall power consumption. We then analyze DPM implementation issues in electronic systems, and we survey recent initiatives in standardizing the hardware/software interface to enable software-controlled power management of hardware components.
Keywords
VLSI; integrated circuit design; low-power electronics; active components; design techniques; energy-efficient computation; hardware/software interface; power-manageable components; system-level dynamic power management; Computer displays; Design methodology; Energy efficiency; Energy management; Hardware; Optical noise; Power system management; Telephony; Turning; Very large scale integration;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-8210
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/92.845896
Filename
845896
Link To Document