Affiliation:
1. Pennsylvania State University
2. University of California at Santa Barbara, Barbara
Abstract
Power management for large last-level caches (LLCs) is important in chip multiprocessors (CMPs), as the leakage power of LLCs accounts for a significant fraction of the limited on-chip power budget. Since not all workloads running on CMPs need the entire cache, portions of a large, shared LLC can be disabled to save energy. In this article, we explore different design choices, from circuit-level cache organization to microarchitectural management policies, to propose a low-overhead runtime mechanism for energy reduction in the large, shared LLC. We first introduce a slice-based cache organization that can shut down parts of the shared LLC with minimal circuit overhead. Based on this slice-based organization, part of the shared LLC can be turned off according to the spatial and temporal cache access behavior captured by low-overhead sampling-based hardware. In order to eliminate the performance penalties caused by flushing data before powering off a cache slice, we propose data migration policies to prevent the loss of useful data in the LLC. Results show that our energy-efficient cache design (EECache) provides 14.1% energy savings at only 1.2% performance degradation and consumes negligible hardware overhead compared to prior work.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Hardware and Architecture,Information Systems,Software
Cited by
7 articles.
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