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ISCA
1995
IEEE

Dynamic Self-Invalidation: Reducing Coherence Overhead in Shared-Memory Multiprocessors

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Dynamic Self-Invalidation: Reducing Coherence Overhead in Shared-Memory Multiprocessors
This paper introduces dynamic self-invalidation (DSI), a new technique for reducing cache coherence overhead in shared-memory multiprocessors. DSI eliminates invalidation messages by having a processor automatically invalidate its local copy of a cache block before a conflicting access by another processor. Eliminating invalidation overhead is particularly important under sequential consistency, where the latency of invalidating outstanding copies can increase a program’s critical path. DSI is applicable to software, hardware, and hybrid coherence schemes. In this paper we evaluate DSI in the context of hardware directory-based write-invalidate coherence protocols. Our results show that DSI reduces execution time of a sequentially consistent full-map coherence protocol by as much as 41%. This is comparable to an implementation of weak consistency that uses a coalescing write-buffer to allow up to 16 outstanding requests for exclusive blocks. When used in conjunction with weak consi...
Alvin R. Lebeck, David A. Wood
Added 26 Aug 2010
Updated 26 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 1995
Where ISCA
Authors Alvin R. Lebeck, David A. Wood
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