Publication | Closed Access
Power Management in Real Time Embedded Systems through Online and Adaptive Interplay of DPM and DVFS Policies
49
Citations
22
References
2010
Year
Unknown Venue
Hybrid Power ManagementEngineeringEnergy EfficiencyPower Optimization (Eda)Real-time System DesignComputer ArchitectureDynamic Power ManagementEmbedded SystemsSystems EngineeringPower-aware SoftwarePower ManagementPower-aware ComputingComputer EngineeringAdaptive InterplayPeriodic Real-time TasksSmart GridEnergy ManagementReal-time SystemsPower-efficient ComputingReal Time
This paper considers the problem of power/energy minimization for periodic real-time tasks that are scheduled over multiprocessor platforms that have dynamic power management (DPM) and dynamic voltage & frequency scaling (DVFS) capabilities. Early research reports that while both DPM and DVFS policies perform well individually for a specific set of conditions, they often outperform each other under different workload and/or architecture configuration. Thus, no single policy fits perfectly all operating conditions. Instead of designing new policies for specific operating conditions, this paper proposes a generic power management scheme, called the Hybrid Power Management (HyPowMan) scheme. This scheme takes a set of well-known existing (DPM and DVFS) policies, each of which performs well for a given set of conditions, and adapts at runtime to the best-performing policy for any given workload. We performed experiments with state-of the-art DPM and DVFS techniques and results show that HyPowMan scheme adapts well to the changing workload and always achieves overall energy savings comparable to the best-performing policy at any point in time.
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