DocumentCode
12014
Title
Opportunities for Nonvolatile Memory Systems in Extreme-Scale High-Performance Computing
Author
Vetter, Jeffrey S. ; Mittal, Sparsh
Author_Institution
Oak Ridge Nat. Lab., Oak Ridge, TN, USA
Volume
17
Issue
2
fYear
2015
fDate
Mar.-Apr. 2015
Firstpage
73
Lastpage
82
Abstract
For extreme-scale high-performance computing systems, system-wide power consumption has been identified as one of the key constraints moving forward, where DRAM main memory systems account for about 30 to 50 percent of a node´s overall power consumption. As the benefits of device scaling for DRAM memory slow, it will become increasingly difficult to keep memory capacities balanced with increasing computational rates offered by next-generation processors. However, several emerging memory technologies related to nonvolatile memory (NVM) devices are being investigated as an alternative for DRAM. Moving forward, NVM devices could offer solutions for HPC architectures. Researchers are investigating how to integrate these emerging technologies into future extreme-scale HPC systems and how to expose these capabilities in the software stack and applications. Current results show several of these strategies could offer high-bandwidth I/O, larger main memory capacities, persistent data structures, and new approaches for application resilience and output postprocessing, such as transaction-based incremental checkpointing and in situ visualization, respectively.
Keywords
DRAM chips; parallel memories; parallel processing; power aware computing; DRAM memory; HPC architecture; NVM device; application resilience; extreme scale high-performance computing; next generation processor; nonvolatile memory systems; output postprocessing; persistent data structure; software stack; system wide power consumption; Flash memories; High performance computing; Market research; Memory management; Nonvolatile memory; Phase change random access memory; Scientific computing; Supercomputers; DRAM; PCM; ReRAM; STT-RAM; flash; high-performance computing; nonvolatile memory; scientific computing; supercomputing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computing in Science & Engineering
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1521-9615
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCSE.2015.4
Filename
7006374
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