Publication | Closed Access
Power-driven design of router microarchitectures in on-chip networks
342
Citations
22
References
2003
Year
Hardware SecurityRouter MicroarchitecturesEngineeringPrior MicroarchitecturesEdge ComputingRouter ArchitectureHigh-performance ArchitectureComputer EngineeringComputer ArchitectureSystems EngineeringNetwork On ChipExpress CubeRouter DesignInterconnection Network ArchitectureInterconnection NetworkParallel ComputingPower-efficient ComputingNetwork Microarchitectures
As demand for bandwidth increases in systems-on-a-chip and chip multiprocessors, networks are fast replacing buses and dedicated wires as the pervasive interconnect fabric for on-chip communication. The tight delay requirements faced by on-chip networks have resulted in prior microarchitectures being largely performance-driven. While performance is a critical metric, on-chip networks are also extremely power-constrained. In this paper, we investigate on-chip network microarchitectures from a power-driven perspective. We first analyze the power dissipation of existing network microarchitectures, highlighting insights that prompt us to devise several power-efficient network microarchitectures: segmented crossbar, cut-through crossbar and write-through buffer. We also study and uncover the power saving potential of existing network architecture: express cube. These techniques are evaluated with synthetic as well as real chip multiprocessor traces, showing a reduction in network power of up to 44.9%, along with no degradation in network performance, and even improved latency-throughput in some cases.
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