Publication | Open Access
Beyond DVFS: A First Look at Performance under a Hardware-Enforced Power Bound
163
Citations
17
References
2012
Year
Unknown Venue
Cluster ComputingEngineeringEnergy EfficiencyComputer ArchitectureProcessor PowerHpc EnvironmentHardware SecurityPerformance PortabilityHigh-performance ArchitectureParallel ComputingManycore ProcessorPower ManagementSandy Bridge FamilyPower-aware ComputingComputer EngineeringFirst LookComputer ScienceHardware AccelerationCloud ComputingParallel ProgrammingPower-efficient ComputingHardware-enforced Power Bound
Dynamic Voltage Frequency Scaling (DVFS) has been the tool of choice for balancing power and performance in high-performance computing (HPC). With the introduction of Intel's Sandy Bridge family of processors, researchers now have a far more attractive option: user-specified, dynamic, hardware-enforced processor power bounds. In this paper we provide a first look at this technology in the HPC environment and detail both the opportunities and potential pitfalls of using this technique to control processor power. As part of this evaluation we measure power and performance for single-processor instances of several of the NAS Parallel Benchmarks. Additionally, we focus on the behavior of a single benchmark, MG, under several different power bounds. We quantify the well-known manufacturing variation in processor power efficiency and show that, in the absence of a power bound, this variation has no correlation to performance. We then show that execution under a power bound translates this variation in efficiency into variation in performance.
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