Title :
High-performance DRAMs in workstation environments
Author :
Cuppu, Vinodh ; Jacob, Bruce ; Davis, Brian ; Mudge, Trevor
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
fDate :
11/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper presents a simulation-based performance study of several of the new high-performance DRAM architectures, each evaluated in a small system organization. These small-system organizations correspond to workstation-class computers and use only a handful of DRAM chips (~10, as opposed to ~1 or ~100). The study covers Fast Page Mode, Extended Data Out, Synchronous, Enhanced Synchronous, Double Data Rate, Synchronous Link, Rambus, and Direct Rambus designs. Our simulations reveal several things: 1) Current advanced DRAM technologies are attacking the memory bandwidth problem but not the latency problem; 2) bus transmission speed will soon become a primary factor limiting memory-system performance; 3) the post-L2 address stream still contains significant locality, though it varies from application to application; 4) systems without L2 caches are feasible for low- and medium-speed CPUs (1 GHz and below); and 5) as we move to wider buses, row access time becomes more prominent, making it important to investigate techniques to exploit the available locality to decrease access time
Keywords :
DRAM chips; memory architecture; DRAM architectures; bus transmission speed; high-performance DRAMs; memory-system performance; post-L2 address stream; simulation-based performance study; small system organization; workstation environments; workstation-class computers; Bandwidth; Computational modeling; Computer architecture; Delay; Educational institutions; Jacobian matrices; Manufacturing processes; Random access memory; SDRAM; Workstations;
Journal_Title :
Computers, IEEE Transactions on