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Design and Analysis of Dynamic Thermal Management in Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs)Yeo, In Choon 2009 December 1900 (has links)
Chip Multiprocessors (CMPs) have been prevailing in the modern microprocessor
market. As the significant heat is converted by the ever-increasing power density and
current leakage, the raised operating temperature in a chip has already threatened
the system?s reliability and led the thermal control to be one of the most important
issues needed to be addressed immediately in chip designs. Due to the cost and
complexity of designing thermal packaging, many Dynamic Thermal Management
(DTM) schemes have been widely adopted in modern processors.
In this study, we focus on developing a simple and accurate thermal model,
which provides a scheduling decision for running tasks. And we show how to design
an efficient DTM scheme with negligible performance overhead. First, we propose an
efficient DTM scheme for multimedia applications that tackles the thermal control
problem in a unified manner. A DTM scheme for multimedia applications makes soft
realtime scheduling decisions based on statistical characteristics of multimedia applications.
Specifically, we model application execution characteristics as the probability
distribution of the number of cycles required to decode frames. Our DTM scheme
for multimedia applications has been implemented on Linux in two mobile processors
providing variable clock frequencies in an Intel Pentium-M processor and an Intel Atom processor. In order to evaluate the performance of the proposed DTM scheme,
we exploit two major codecs, MPEG-4 and H.264/AVC based on various frame resolutions.
Our results show that our DTM scheme for multimedia applications lowers
the overall temperature by 4 degrees C and the peak temperature by 6 degrees C (up to 10 degrees C),
while maintaining frame drop ratio under 5% compared to existing DTM schemes
for multimedia applications. Second, we propose a lightweight online workload estimation
using the cumulative distribution function and architectural information via
Performance Monitoring Counters (PMC) to observe the processes dynamic workload
behaviors. We also present an accurate thermal model for CMP architectures to analyze
the thermal correlation effects by profiling the thermal impacts from neighboring
cores under the specific workload. Hence, according to the estimated workload characteristics
and thermal correlation effects, we can estimate the future temperature of
each core more accurately.
We implement a DTM scheme considering workload characteristics and thermal
correlation effects on real machines, an Intel Quad-Core Q6600 system and Dell
PowerEdge 2950 (dual Intel Xeon E5310 Quad-Core) system, running applications
ranging from multimedia applications to several benchmarks. Experiments results
show that our DTM scheme reduces the peak temperature by 8% with 0.54% performance
overhead compared to Linux Standard Scheduler, while existing DTM schemes
reduce peak temperature by 4% with up to 50% performance overhead.
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Bio-Inspired Distributed Constrained Optimization Technique and its Application in Dynamic Thermal ManagementChandrasekaran, Saranya 01 May 2010 (has links)
The stomatal network in plants is a well-characterized biological system that hypothetically solves the constrained optimization problem of maximizing CO2 uptake from the air while constraining evaporative water loss during the process of photosynthesis. There are numerous such constrained optimization problems present in the real world as well as in computer science. This thesis work attempts to solve one such constrained optimization problem in a distributed manner by taking a cue from the dynamics of stomatal networks. The problem considered here is Dynamic Thermal Management (DTM) in a multi-processing element system in computing. There have been several approaches in the past that tried to solve the problem of DTM by varying the frequency of operation of blocks in the computing system. The selection of frequencies for DTM such that overall performance is maximized while temperature is constrained is a non-deterministic polynomial-time (NP) hard problem. In this thesis, a distributed approach to solve the problem of DTM using a cellular neural network is proposed. A cellular neural network is used to mimic the stomatal network with slight variations based on the problem considered.
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Unified Framework for Energy-proportional Computing in Multicore Processors: Novel Algorithms and Practical ImplementationJanuary 2013 (has links)
abstract: Multicore processors have proliferated in nearly all forms of computing, from servers, desktop, to smartphones. The primary reason for this large adoption of multicore processors is due to its ability to overcome the power-wall by providing higher performance at a lower power consumption rate. With multi-cores, there is increased need for dynamic energy management (DEM), much more than for single-core processors, as DEM for multi-cores is no more a mechanism just to ensure that a processor is kept under specified temperature limits, but also a set of techniques that manage various processor controls like dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), task migration, fan speed, etc. to achieve a stated objective. The objectives span a wide range from maximizing throughput, minimizing power consumption, reducing peak temperature, maximizing energy efficiency, maximizing processor reliability, and so on, along with much more wider constraints of temperature, power, timing, and reliability constraints. Thus DEM can be very complex and challenging to achieve. Since often times many DEMs operate together on a single processor, there is a need to unify various DEM techniques. This dissertation address such a need. In this work, a framework for DEM is proposed that provides a unifying processor model that includes processor power, thermal, timing, and reliability models, supports various DEM control mechanisms, many different objective functions along with equally diverse constraint specifications. Using the framework, a range of novel solutions is derived for instances of DEM problems, that include maximizing processor performance, energy efficiency, or minimizing power consumption, peak temperature under constraints of maximum temperature, memory reliability and task deadlines. Finally, a robust closed-loop controller to implement the above solutions on a real processor platform with a very low operational overhead is proposed. Along with the controller design, a model identification methodology for obtaining the required power and thermal models for the controller is also discussed. The controller is architecture independent and hence easily portable across many platforms. The controller has been successfully deployed on Intel Sandy Bridge processor and the use of the controller has increased the energy efficiency of the processor by over 30% / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Electrical Engineering 2013
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Practical Dynamic Thermal Management on Intel Desktop ComputerLiu, Guanglei 12 July 2012 (has links)
Fueled by increasing human appetite for high computing performance, semiconductor technology has now marched into the deep sub-micron era. As transistor size keeps shrinking, more and more transistors are integrated into a single chip. This has increased tremendously the power consumption and heat generation of IC chips. The rapidly growing heat dissipation greatly increases the packaging/cooling costs, and adversely affects the performance and reliability of a computing system. In addition, it also reduces the processor's life span and may even crash the entire computing system. Therefore, dynamic thermal management (DTM) is becoming a critical problem in modern computer system design.
Extensive theoretical research has been conducted to study the DTM problem. However, most of them are based on theoretically idealized assumptions or simplified models. While these models and assumptions help to greatly simplify a complex problem and make it theoretically manageable, practical computer systems and applications must deal with many practical factors and details beyond these models or assumptions.
The goal of our research was to develop a test platform that can be used to validate theoretical results on DTM under well-controlled conditions, to identify the limitations of existing theoretical results, and also to develop new and practical DTM techniques. This dissertation details the background and our research efforts in this endeavor. Specifically, in our research, we first developed a customized test platform based on an Intel desktop. We then tested a number of related theoretical works and examined their limitations under the practical hardware environment. With these limitations in mind, we developed a new reactive thermal management algorithm for single-core computing systems to optimize the throughput under a peak temperature constraint. We further extended our research to a multicore platform and developed an effective proactive DTM technique for throughput maximization on multicore processor based on task migration and dynamic voltage frequency scaling technique. The significance of our research lies in the fact that our research complements the current extensive theoretical research in dealing with increasingly critical thermal problems and enabling the continuous evolution of high performance computing systems.
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Composite thermal capacitors for transient thermal management of multicore microprocessorsGreen, Craig Elkton 06 June 2012 (has links)
While 3D stacked multi-processor technology offers the potential for significant computing advantages, these architectures also face the significant challenge of small, localized hotspots with very large heat fluxes due to the placement of asymmetric cores, heterogeneous devices and performance driven layouts. In this thesis, a new thermal management solution is introduced that seeks to maximize the performance of microprocessors with dynamically managed power profiles. To mitigate the non-uniformities in chip temperature profiles resulting from the dynamic power maps, solid-liquid phase change materials (PCMs) with an embedded heat spreader network are strategically positioned near localized hotspots, resulting in a large increase in the local thermal capacitance in these problematic areas.
Theoretical analysis shows that the increase in local thermal capacitance results in an almost twenty-fold increase in the time that a thermally constrained core can operate before a power gating or core migration event is required. Coupled to the PCMs are solid state coolers (SSCs) that serve as a means for fast regeneration of the PCMs during the cool down periods associated with throttling events. Using this combined PCM/SSC approach allows for devices that operate with the desirable combination of low throttling frequency and large overall core duty cycles, thus maximizing computational throughput. The impact of the thermophysical properties of the PCM on the device operating characteristics has been investigated from first principles in order to better inform the PCM selection or design process.
Complementary to the theoretical characterization of the proposed thermal solution, a prototype device called a "Composite Thermal Capacitor (CTC)" that monolithically integrates micro heaters, PCMs and a spreader matrix into a Si test chip was fabricated and tested to validate the efficacy of the concept. A prototype CTC was shown to increase allowable device operating times by over 7X and address heat fluxes of up to ~395 W/cm2. Various methods for regenerating the CTC have been investigated, including air, liquid, and solid state cooling, and operational duty cycles of over 60% have been demonstrated.
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