Publication | Closed Access
A bandwidth-efficient architecture for media processing
126
Citations
7
References
2002
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMultimedia ProcessorComputer ArchitectureAvailable ParallelismData Streaming ArchitectureVlsi ArchitecturesProcessor ArchitectureBandwidth-efficient ArchitectureHigh-performance ArchitectureMultimedia StorageMedia ApplicationsParallel ComputingStream ProcessingStreaming EngineComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceMultimedia DeliveryEdge ComputingCloud ComputingParallel ProgrammingSystem Software
Media applications are characterized by large amounts of available parallelism, little data reuse, and a high computation to memory access ratio. While these characteristics are poorly matched to conventional microprocessor architectures, they are a good fit for modern VLSI technology with its high arithmetic capacity but limited global bandwidth. The stream programming model, in which an application is coded as streams of data records passing through computation kernels, exposes both parallelism and locality in media applications that can be exploited by VLSI architectures. The Imagine architecture supports the stream programming model by providing a bandwidth hierarchy tailored to the demands of media applications. Compared to a conventional scalar processor. Imagine reduces the global register and memory bandwidth required by typical applications by factors of 13 and 21 respectively. This bandwidth efficiency enables a single chip Imagine processor to achieve a peak performance of 16.2GFLOPS (single-precision floating point) and sustained performance of up to 8.5GFLOPS on media processing kernels.
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