Title :
Thermal and Energy Management of High-Performance Multicores: Distributed and Self-Calibrating Model-Predictive Controller
Author :
Bartolini, Andrea ; Cacciari, Matteo ; Tilli, Andrea ; Benini, Luca
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron., Comput. Sci. & Syst., Univ. of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Abstract :
As result of technology scaling, single-chip multicore power density increases and its spatial and temporal workload variation leads to temperature hot-spots, which may cause nonuniform ageing and accelerated chip failure. These critical issues can be tackled by closed-loop thermal and reliability management policies. Model predictive controllers (MPC) outperform classic feedback controllers since they are capable of minimizing performance loss while enforcing safe working temperature. Unfortunately, MPC controllers rely on a priori knowledge of thermal models and their complexity exponentially grows with the number of controlled cores. In this paper, we present a scalable, fully distributed, energy-aware thermal management solution for single-chip multicore platforms. The model-predictive controller complexity is drastically reduced by splitting it in a set of simpler interacting controllers, each one allocated to a core in the system. Locally, each node selects the optimal frequency to meet temperature constraints while minimizing the performance penalty and system energy. Comparable performance with state-of-the-art MPC controllers is achieved by letting controllers exchange a limited amount of information at runtime on a neighborhood basis. In addition, we address model uncertainty by supporting learning of the thermal model with a novel distributed self-calibration approach that matches well the controller architecture.
Keywords :
calibration; distributed control; multiprocessing systems; multivariable control systems; performance evaluation; power aware computing; predictive control; reliability; temperature; accelerated chip failure; distributed model-predictive controller; distributed self-calibration approach; energy management; high-performance multicores; model-predictive controller complexity; nonuniform ageing; reliability management policies; self-calibrating model-predictive controller; single-chip multicore power density; spatial workload variation; state-of-the-art MPC controllers; temperature hot-spots; temporal workload variation; thermal management; thermal models; Complexity theory; Multicore processing; Power demand; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Thermal control; energy minimization; model predictive controller; multicore; system identification;
Journal_Title :
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPDS.2012.117