Throughput servers using simultaneous multithreaded (SMT) processors are becoming an important paradigm with products such as Sun's Niagara and IBM Power5. Unfortunately, throughput-computing via SMT aggravates power-density problems because SMT increases utilization, decreasing cooling opportunities for overheated resources. Existing power density techniques are: slowing computation and lowering supply voltage, which is likely infeasible in future technologies; stopping computation to reduce heating, which substantially degrades performance; or migrating computation to spare resources, which adds complexity; or requiring underutilized resources, which may not be available in an SMT-based throughput server. An alternative is to increase the area of heat-prone resources at design time. We propose the concept of dilation where a resource’s circuit components are spread over an area larger than required for correct logic. Increasing area allows the resource to be utilized more wit...
Michael D. Powell, T. N. Vijaykumar