Protozoa

Author:

Zhao Hongzhou1,Shriraman Arrvindh2,Kumar Snehasish1,Dwarkadas Sandhya1

Affiliation:

1. University of Rochester

2. Simon Fraser University

Abstract

State-of-the-art multiprocessor cache hierarchies propagate the use of a fixed granularity in the cache organization to the design of the coherence protocol. Unfortunately, the fixed granularity, generally chosen to match average spatial locality across a range of applications, not only results in wasted bandwidth to serve an individual thread's access needs, but also results in unnecessary coherence traffic for shared data. The additional bandwidth has a direct impact on both the scalability of parallel applications and overall energy consumption. In this paper, we present the design of Protozoa, a family of coherence protocols that eliminate unnecessary coherence traffic and match data movement to an application's spatial locality. Protozoa continues to maintain metadata at a conventional fixed cache line granularity while 1) supporting variable read and write caching granularity so that data transfer matches application spatial granularity, 2) invalidating at the granularity of the write miss request so that readers to disjoint data can co-exist with writers, and 3) potentially supporting multiple non-overlapping writers within the cache line, thereby avoiding the traditional ping-pong effect of both read-write and write-write false sharing. Our evaluation demonstrates that Protozoa consistently reduce miss rate and improve the fraction of transmitted data that is actually utilized.

Funder

Division of Computer and Network Systems

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Division of Computing and Communication Foundations

Canadian Microelectronics Corporation

MARCO Gigascale Research Center

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Accelerating Cache Coherence in Manycore Processor through Silicon Photonic Chiplet;Proceedings of the 41st IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design;2022-10-30

2. Dynamic directory table with victim cache: on-demand allocation of directory entries for active shared cache blocks;The Journal of Supercomputing;2019-01

3. Inefficiencies in the Cache Hierarchy;Proceedings of the 2015 International Symposium on Memory Systems;2015-10-05

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