Publication | Closed Access
Understanding Latency Variation in Modern DRAM Chips
162
Citations
80
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
Hardware SecurityLong Dram LatencyDram Access LatencyNon-volatile MemoryEngineeringUltra-low LatencyHigh-performance ArchitectureComputer EngineeringComputer ArchitectureComputer ScienceParallel ComputingLatency VariationMicroelectronicsMemory ArchitectureSignificant Latency Variation
Long DRAM latency is a critical performance bottleneck in current systems. DRAM access latency is defined by three fundamental operations that take place within the DRAM cell array: (i) activation of a memory row, which opens the row to perform accesses; (ii) precharge, which prepares the cell array for the next memory access; and (iii) restoration of the row, which restores the values of cells in the row that were destroyed due to activation. There is significant latency variation for each of these operations across the cells of a single DRAM chip due to irregularity in the manufacturing process. As a result, some cells are inherently faster to access, while others are inherently slower. Unfortunately, existing systems do not exploit this variation.
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