Publication | Closed Access
Power Management of Datacenter Workloads Using Per-Core Power Gating
133
Citations
11
References
2009
Year
Modern ProcessorsCluster ComputingEngineeringComputer ArchitectureDatacenter-scale ComputingHardware SecurityGreen Data CenterParallel ComputingManycore ProcessorPower ManagementEnergy ConsumptionPower-aware ComputingData Center SystemComputer EngineeringData CentersComputer ScienceEnergy ManagementEdge ComputingCloud ComputingProcessor Power ManagementMany-core ArchitectureParallel ProgrammingPower-efficient Computing
While modern processors offer a wide spectrum of software-controlled power modes, most datacenters only rely on dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS, a.k.a. P-states) to achieve energy efficiency. This paper argues that, in the case of datacenter workloads, DVFS is not the only option for processor power management. We make the case for per-core power gating (PCPG) as an additional power management knob for multi-core processors. PCPG is the ability to cut the voltage supply to selected cores, thus reducing to almost zero the leakage power for the gated cores. Using a testbed based on a commercial 4-core chip and a set of real-world application traces from enterprise environments, we have evaluated the potential of PCPG. We show that PCPG can significantly reduce a processor's energy consumption (up to 40%) without significant performance overheads. When compared to DVFS, PCPG is highly effective saving up to 30% more energy than DVFS. When DVFS and PCPG operate together they can save up to almost 60%.
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