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DAC
2007
ACM

The KILL Rule for Multicore

14 years 10 months ago
The KILL Rule for Multicore
Multicore has shown significant performance and power advantages over single cores in commercial systems with a 2-4 cores. Applying a corollary of Moore's Law for multicore, we expect to see 1K multicore chips within a decade. 1K multicore systems introduce significant architectural challenges. One of these is the power efficiency challenge. Today's cores consume 10's of watts. Even at about one watt per core, a 1K-core chip would need to dissipate 1K watts! This paper discusses the "Kill rule for multicore" for power-efficient multicore design, an approach inspired by the "Kiss rule for RISC processor design". Kill stands for Kill if less than linear, and represents a design approach in which any additional area allocated to a resource within a core, such as a cache, is carefully traded off against using the area for additional cores. The Kill Rule states that we must increase resource size (for example, cache size) only if for every 1% increase in ...
Anant Agarwal, Markus Levy
Added 12 Nov 2009
Updated 12 Nov 2009
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where DAC
Authors Anant Agarwal, Markus Levy
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