DocumentCode :
2448865
Title :
A technique to determine power-efficient, high-performance superscalar processors
Author :
Conte, Thomas M. ; Menezes, Kishore N P ; Sathaye, Sumedh W.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., South Carolina Univ., Columbia, SC, USA
Volume :
1
fYear :
1995
fDate :
3-6 Jan 1995
Firstpage :
324
Abstract :
Processor performance advances are increasingly inhibited by limitations in thermal power dissipation. Part of the problem is the lack of architectural power estimates before implementation. Although high-performance designs exist that dissipate low power, the method for finding these designs has been through trial-and-error. The paper presents systematic techniques to find low-power, high-performance superscalar processors tailored to specific user benchmarks. The model of power is novel because it separates power into architectural and technology components. The architectural component is found via trace-driven simulation, which also produces performance estimates. An example technology model is presented that estimates the technology component, along with critical delay time and real estate usage. This model is based on case studies of actual designs. It is used to solve an important problem: increasing the duplication in superscalar execution units without excessive power consumption. Results are presented from runs using simulated annealing to maximize processor performance subject to power and area constraints. The major contributions of the paper are the separation of architectural and technology components of dynamic power, the use of trace-driven simulation for architectural power measurement, and the use of a near-optimal search to tailor a processor design to a benchmark
Keywords :
parallel architectures; parallel machines; performance evaluation; power consumption; simulated annealing; architectural component; architectural power estimates; architectural power measurement; high-performance superscalar processors; near-optimal search; power-efficient superscalar processors; processor performance advances; real estate usage; simulated annealing; superscalar execution units; systematic techniques; thermal power dissipation; trace-driven simulation; user benchmarks; Computer architecture; Delay effects; Delay estimation; Energy consumption; Laboratories; Paper technology; Power dissipation; Power measurement; Power system modeling; Process design; Simulated annealing; Thermal engineering;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences, 1995. Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Wailea, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6930-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.1995.375381
Filename :
375381
Link To Document :
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