Publication | Closed Access
A framework for scheduling DRAM memory accesses for multi-core mixed-time critical systems
55
Citations
19
References
2015
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringComputer ArchitectureMemory RequestsDram Memory AccessesMulti-channel Memory ArchitectureHardware SecurityReal-time SystemShared MemorySystems EngineeringParallel ComputingMemory ManagementSrt TasksMixed-time Critical SystemsComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceReal-time ComputingReal-time AlgorithmMemory ArchitectureEdge ComputingReal-time Multiprocessor SystemCloud ComputingMany-core ArchitectureParallel ProgrammingReal-time Systems
Mixed-time critical systems are real-time systems that accommodate both hard real-time (HRT) and soft realtime (SRT) tasks. HRT tasks mandate a gurantee on the worstcase latency, while SRT tasks have average-case bandwidth (BW) demands. Memory requests in mixed-time critical systems usually have different transaction sizes based on whether the issuer task is HRT or SRT. For example, HRT tasks often issue requests with a cache line size. On the other side, SRT tasks may issue requests with a size of KBs. Requests from multimedia cores, cores controlling network interfaces and direct memory accesses (DMAs) are obvious examples of these large-size requests. Based on these observations, we promote in this work a new approach to schedule memory requests. This approach retains locality within large-size requests to minimize the worst-case latency, while maintaining the average-case BW as high as required. To achieve this target, we introduce a novel and compact time-division-multiplexing scheduler that is adequate for mixed-time critical systems. We also present a novel framework that constructs optimal offchip DRAM memory controller schedules for multi-core mixedtime critical systems. These schedules are loaded to the memory controller during boot-time. Based on the proposed schedule, we provide a detailed static analysis that guarantees predictability. We compare the proposed controller against state-of-the-art realtime memory controllers using synthetic experiments as well as a practical use-case from multimedia systems.
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