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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Data centric and adaptive source changing transactional memory with exit functionality

Herath, Herath Mudiyanselage Isuru Prasenajith January 2012 (has links)
Multi-core computing is becoming ubiquitous due to the scaling limitations of single-core computing. It is inevitable that parallel programming will become the mainstream for such processors. In this paradigm shift, the concept of abstraction should not be compromised. A programming model serves as an abstraction of how programs are executed. Transactional Memory (TM) is a technique proposed to maintain lock free synchronization. Due to the simplicity of the abstraction provided by it, TM can also be used as a way of distributing parallel work, maintaining coherence and consistency. Motivated by this, at a higher level, the thesis makes three contributions and all are centred around Hardware Transactional Memory (HTM).As the first contribution, a transaction-only architecture is coupled with a ``data centric" approach, to address the scalability issues of the former whilst maintaining its simplicity. This is achieved by grouping together memory locations having similar access patterns and maintaining coherence and consistency according to the group each memory location belongs to. As the second contribution a novel technique is proposed to reduce the number of false transaction aborts which occur in a signature based HTM. The idea is to adaptively switch between cache lines and signatures to detect conflicts. That is, when a transaction fits in the L1 cache, cache line information is used to detect conflicts and signatures are used otherwise. As the third contribution, the thesis makes a case for having an exit functionality in an HTM. The objective of the proposed functionality, TM_EXIT, is to terminate a transaction without restarting or committing.
2

Mutex Locking versus Hardware Transactional Memory: An Experimental Evaluation

Moore, Sean Ryan 06 October 2015 (has links)
It has historically been the case that CPUs have run programs ever faster without significant intervention on the behalf of the programmer. However, this "free lunch" has largely ended due to the end of exponentially increasing core frequency and the current slow increase in instruction-level parallelism but continues to a degree in cache size improvements. But since Moore's law still largely continues "lunch", i.e. program performance, can still be bought at the price of rewriting code for multiple cores, which is enabled by the trend Moore's law describes. Multicore architectures cannot aid performance for problems whose solutions are necessarily sequential in nature and writing efficient and correct concurrent programs is not easy in all cases when using synchronization methods like fine-grained mutex locks. Transactional memory, and its implementation as hardware transactional memory, allow programmers to write concurrent applications without the attendant complexity of programming with mutex locks. This allows programmers to focus on optimizing the application for performance. Given that transactions can run two segments of code in parallel that a mutex lock would force to run sequentially and that transactions can abort, causing a program to do the same work more than once, whether transactions perform better or worse than mutex locks is dependent on the program's execution profile and the coarseness or fineness at which mutex locks are used. In this thesis the GNU C Library's futex implementation of mutex locks and Intel's Restricted Transactional Memory have been compared and the behavior of those transactions has been analyzed. This analysis includes a pathological behavior permitted by the GNU C Library's hardware transactional memory implementation of mutex locks. The tradeoffs between fine-grained and global locking implementations have been discussed, compared, and used in the context of fallback locks for hardware transactions. This thesis provides evidence to the effect that fine-grained locking is not critical for program performance and that in many cases global locking and hardware transactions can provide nearly equivalent performance without the programming difficulties. This work has shown that across the 23 applications examined, with relation to their original locking implementation, a global locking scheme without elision has a 0.96x speedup, Intel's Restricted Transactional Memory (RTM) with the application's original locks as a fallback has a 1.01x speedup and with global lock fallback RTM has a speedup of 0.97x. This work is supported in part by NAVSEA/NEEC under grant 3003279297. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this thesis are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of NAVSEA. / Master of Science
3

Transactions Everywhere

Kuszmaul, Bradley C., Leiserson, Charles E. 01 1900 (has links)
Arguably, one of the biggest deterrants for software developers who might otherwise choose to write parallel code is that parallelism makes their lives more complicated. Perhaps the most basic problem inherent in the coordination of concurrent tasks is the enforcing of atomicity so that the partial results of one task do not inadvertently corrupt another task. Atomicity is typically enforced through locking protocols, but these protocols can introduce other complications, such as deadlock, unless restrictive methodologies in their use are adopted. We have recently begun a research project focusing on transactional memory [18] as an alternative mechanism for enforcing atomicity, since it allows the user to avoid many of the complications inherent in locking protocols. Rather than viewing transactions as infrequent occurrences in a program, as has generally been done in the past, we have adopted the point of view that all user code should execute in the context of some transaction. To make this viewpoint viable requires the development of two key technologies: effective hardware support for scalable transactional memory, and linguistic and compiler support. This paper describes our preliminary research results on making “transactions everywhere” a practical reality. / Singapore-MIT Alliance (SMA)
4

Architectural support for high-performing hardware transactional memory systems

Lupon Navazo, Marc 23 December 2011 (has links)
Parallel programming presents an efficient solution to exploit future multicore processors. Unfortunately, traditional programming models depend on programmer’s skills for synchronizing concurrent threads, which makes the development of parallel software a hard and errorprone task. In addition to this, current synchronization techniques serialize the execution of those critical sections that conflict in shared memory and thus limit the scalability of multithreaded applications. Transactional Memory (TM) has emerged as a promising programming model that solves the trade-off between high performance and ease of use. In TM, the system is in charge of scheduling transactions (atomic blocks of instructions) and guaranteeing that they are executed in isolation, which simplifies writing parallel code and, at the same time, enables high concurrency when atomic regions access different data. Among all forms of TM environments, Hardware TM (HTM) systems is the only one that offers fast execution at the cost of adding dedicated logic in the processor. Existing HTMsystems suffer considerable delays when they execute complex transactional workloads, especially when they deal with large and contending transactions because they lack adaptability. Furthermore, most HTM implementations are ad hoc and require cumbersome hardware structures to be effective, which complicates the feasibility of the design. This thesis makes several contributions in the design and analysis of low-cost HTMsystems that yield good performance for any kind of TM program. Our first contribution, FASTM, introduces a novel mechanism to elegantly manage speculative (and already validated) versions of transactional data by slightly modifying on-chip memory engine. This approach permits fast recovery when a transaction that fits in private caches is discarded. At the same time, it keeps non-speculative values in software, which allows in-place x memory updates. Thus, FASTM is not hurt from capacity issues nor slows down when it has to undo transactional modifications. Our second contribution includes two different HTM systems that integrate deferred resolution of conflicts in a conventional multicore processor, which reduces the complexity of the system with respect to previous proposals. The first one, FUSETM, combines different-mode transactions under a unified infrastructure to gracefully handle resource overflow. As a result, FUSETM brings fast transactional computation without requiring additional hardware nor extra communication at the end of speculative execution. The second one, SPECTM, introduces a two-level data versioning mechanism to resolve conflicts in a speculative fashion even in the case of overflow. Our third and last contribution presents a couple of truly flexible HTM systems that can dynamically adapt their underlying mechanisms according to the characteristics of the program. DYNTM records statistics of previously executed transactions to select the best-suited strategy each time a new instance of a transaction starts. SWAPTM takes a different approach: it tracks information of the current transactional instance to change its priority level at runtime. Both alternatives obtain great performance over existing proposals that employ fixed transactional policies, especially in applications with phase changes.
5

Hardware transactional memory : a systems perspective

Rossbach, Christopher John 22 March 2011 (has links)
The increasing ubiquity of chip multiprocessor machines has made the need for accessible approaches to parallel programming all the more urgent. The current state of the art, based on threads and locks, requires the programmer to use mutual exclusion to protect shared resources, enforce invariants, and maintain consistency constraints. Despite decades of research effort, this approach remains fraught with difficulty. Lock-based programming is complex and error-prone, largely due to well-known problems such as deadlock, priority inversion, and poor composability. Tradeoffs between performance and complexity for locks remain unattractive. Coarse-grain locking is simple but introduces artificial sharing, needless serialization, and yields poor performance. Fine-grain locking can address these issues, but at a significant cost in complexity and maintainability. Transactional memory has emerged as a technology with the potential to address this need for better parallel programming tools. Transactions provide the abstraction of isolated, atomic execution of critical sections. The programmer specifies regions of code which access shared data, and the system is responsible for executing that code in a way that is isolated and atomic. The programmer need not reason about locks and threads. Transactional memory removes many of the pitfalls of locking: transactions are livelock- and deadlock-free and may be composed freely. Hardware transactional memory, which is the focus of this thesis, provides an efficient implementation of the TM abstraction. This thesis explores several key aspects of supporting hardware transactional memory (HTM): operating systems support and integration, architectural, design, and implementation considerations, and programmer-transparent techniques to improve HTM performance in the presence of contention. Using and supporting HTM in an OS requires innovation in both the OS and the architecture, but enables practical approaches and solutions to some long-standing OS problems. Innovations in transactional cache coherence protocols enable HTM support in the presence of multi-level cache hierarchies, rich HTM semantics such as suspend/resume and multiple transactions per thread context, and can provide the building blocks for support of flexible contention management policies without the need to trap to software handlers. We demonstrate a programmer-transparent hardware technique for using dependences between transactions to commit conflicting transactions, and suggest techniques to allow conflicting transactions to avoid performance-sapping restarts without using heuristics such as backoff. Both mechanisms yield better performance for workloads that have significant write-sharing. Finally, in the context of the MetaTM HTM model, this thesis contributes a high-fidelity cross-design comparison of representative proposals from the literature: the result is a comprehensive exploration of the HTM design space that compares the behavior of models of MetaTM (70, 75), LogTM (58, 94), and Sun's Rock (22). / text
6

Memória transacional em hardware para sistemas embarcados multiprocessados conectados por redes-em-chip / Hardware transactional memory for noc-based multi-core embedded systems

Kunz, Leonardo January 2010 (has links)
A Memória Transacional (TM) surgiu nos últimos anos como uma nova solução para sincronização em sistemas multiprocessados de memória compartilhada, permitindo explorar melhor o paralelismo das aplicações ao evitar limitações inerentes ao mecanismo de locks. Neste modelo, o programador define regiões de código que devem executar de forma atômica. O sistema tenta executá-las de forma concorrente, e, em caso de conflito nos acessos à memória, toma as medidas necessárias para preservar a atomicidade e isolamento das transações, na maioria das vezes abortando e reexecutando uma das transações. Um dos modelos mais aceitos de memória transacional em hardware é o LogTM, implementado neste trabalho em um MPSoC embarcado que utiliza uma NoC para interconexão. Os experimentos fazem uma comparação desta implementação com locks, levando-se em consideração performance e energia do sistema. Além disso, este trabalho mostra que o tempo que uma transação espera para reiniciar sua execução após ter abortado (chamado de backoff delay on abort) tem impactos significativos na performance e energia. Uma análise deste impacto é feita utilizando-se de três políticas de backoff. Um mecanismo baseado em um handshake entre transações, chamado Abort handshake, é proposto como solução para o problema. Os resultados dos experimentos são dependentes da aplicação e configuração do sistema e indicam ganhos da TM na maioria dos casos em relação ao mecanismo de locks. Houve redução de até 30% no tempo de execução e de até 32% na energia de aplicações de baixa demanda de sincronização. Em um segundo momento, é feita uma análise do backoff delay on abort na performance e energia de aplicações utilizando três políticas de backoff em comparação com o mecanismo Abort handshake. Os resultados mostram que o mecanismo proposto apresenta redução de até 20% no tempo de execução e de até 53% na energia comparado à melhor política de backoff dentre as analisadas. Para aplicações com alta demanda de sincronização, a TM mostra redução no tempo de execução de até 63% e redução de energia de até 71% em comparação com o mecanismo de locks. / Transactional Memory (TM) has emerged in the last years as a new solution for synchronization on shared memory multiprocessor systems, allowing a better exploration of the parallelism of the applications by avoiding inherent limitations of the lock mechanism. In this model, the programmer defines regions of code, called transactions, to execute atomically. The system tries to execute transactions concurrently, but in case of conflict on memory accesses, it takes the appropriate measures to preserve the atomicity and isolation, usually aborting and re-executing one of the transactions. One of the most accepted hardware transactional memory model is LogTM, implemented in this work in an embedded MPSoC that uses an NoC as interconnection mechanism. The experiments compare this implementation with locks, considering performance and energy. Furthermore, this work shows that the time a transaction waits to restart after abort (called backoff delay on abort) has significant impact on performance and energy. An analysis of this impact is done using three backoff policies. A novel mechanism based on handshake of transactions, called Abort handshake, is proposed as a solution to this issue. The results of the experiments depends on application and system configuration and show TM benefits in most cases in comparison to the locks mechanism, reaching reduction on the execution time up to 30% and reduction on the energy consumption up to 32% on low contention workloads. After that, an analysis of the backoff delay on abort on the performance and energy is presented, comparing to the Abort handshake mechanism. The proposed mechanism shows reduction of up to 20% on the execution time and up to 53% on the energy, when compared to the best backoff policy. For applications with a high degree of synchronization, TM shows reduction on the execution time up to 63% and energy savings up to 71% compared to locks.
7

Memória transacional em hardware para sistemas embarcados multiprocessados conectados por redes-em-chip / Hardware transactional memory for noc-based multi-core embedded systems

Kunz, Leonardo January 2010 (has links)
A Memória Transacional (TM) surgiu nos últimos anos como uma nova solução para sincronização em sistemas multiprocessados de memória compartilhada, permitindo explorar melhor o paralelismo das aplicações ao evitar limitações inerentes ao mecanismo de locks. Neste modelo, o programador define regiões de código que devem executar de forma atômica. O sistema tenta executá-las de forma concorrente, e, em caso de conflito nos acessos à memória, toma as medidas necessárias para preservar a atomicidade e isolamento das transações, na maioria das vezes abortando e reexecutando uma das transações. Um dos modelos mais aceitos de memória transacional em hardware é o LogTM, implementado neste trabalho em um MPSoC embarcado que utiliza uma NoC para interconexão. Os experimentos fazem uma comparação desta implementação com locks, levando-se em consideração performance e energia do sistema. Além disso, este trabalho mostra que o tempo que uma transação espera para reiniciar sua execução após ter abortado (chamado de backoff delay on abort) tem impactos significativos na performance e energia. Uma análise deste impacto é feita utilizando-se de três políticas de backoff. Um mecanismo baseado em um handshake entre transações, chamado Abort handshake, é proposto como solução para o problema. Os resultados dos experimentos são dependentes da aplicação e configuração do sistema e indicam ganhos da TM na maioria dos casos em relação ao mecanismo de locks. Houve redução de até 30% no tempo de execução e de até 32% na energia de aplicações de baixa demanda de sincronização. Em um segundo momento, é feita uma análise do backoff delay on abort na performance e energia de aplicações utilizando três políticas de backoff em comparação com o mecanismo Abort handshake. Os resultados mostram que o mecanismo proposto apresenta redução de até 20% no tempo de execução e de até 53% na energia comparado à melhor política de backoff dentre as analisadas. Para aplicações com alta demanda de sincronização, a TM mostra redução no tempo de execução de até 63% e redução de energia de até 71% em comparação com o mecanismo de locks. / Transactional Memory (TM) has emerged in the last years as a new solution for synchronization on shared memory multiprocessor systems, allowing a better exploration of the parallelism of the applications by avoiding inherent limitations of the lock mechanism. In this model, the programmer defines regions of code, called transactions, to execute atomically. The system tries to execute transactions concurrently, but in case of conflict on memory accesses, it takes the appropriate measures to preserve the atomicity and isolation, usually aborting and re-executing one of the transactions. One of the most accepted hardware transactional memory model is LogTM, implemented in this work in an embedded MPSoC that uses an NoC as interconnection mechanism. The experiments compare this implementation with locks, considering performance and energy. Furthermore, this work shows that the time a transaction waits to restart after abort (called backoff delay on abort) has significant impact on performance and energy. An analysis of this impact is done using three backoff policies. A novel mechanism based on handshake of transactions, called Abort handshake, is proposed as a solution to this issue. The results of the experiments depends on application and system configuration and show TM benefits in most cases in comparison to the locks mechanism, reaching reduction on the execution time up to 30% and reduction on the energy consumption up to 32% on low contention workloads. After that, an analysis of the backoff delay on abort on the performance and energy is presented, comparing to the Abort handshake mechanism. The proposed mechanism shows reduction of up to 20% on the execution time and up to 53% on the energy, when compared to the best backoff policy. For applications with a high degree of synchronization, TM shows reduction on the execution time up to 63% and energy savings up to 71% compared to locks.
8

Memória transacional em hardware para sistemas embarcados multiprocessados conectados por redes-em-chip / Hardware transactional memory for noc-based multi-core embedded systems

Kunz, Leonardo January 2010 (has links)
A Memória Transacional (TM) surgiu nos últimos anos como uma nova solução para sincronização em sistemas multiprocessados de memória compartilhada, permitindo explorar melhor o paralelismo das aplicações ao evitar limitações inerentes ao mecanismo de locks. Neste modelo, o programador define regiões de código que devem executar de forma atômica. O sistema tenta executá-las de forma concorrente, e, em caso de conflito nos acessos à memória, toma as medidas necessárias para preservar a atomicidade e isolamento das transações, na maioria das vezes abortando e reexecutando uma das transações. Um dos modelos mais aceitos de memória transacional em hardware é o LogTM, implementado neste trabalho em um MPSoC embarcado que utiliza uma NoC para interconexão. Os experimentos fazem uma comparação desta implementação com locks, levando-se em consideração performance e energia do sistema. Além disso, este trabalho mostra que o tempo que uma transação espera para reiniciar sua execução após ter abortado (chamado de backoff delay on abort) tem impactos significativos na performance e energia. Uma análise deste impacto é feita utilizando-se de três políticas de backoff. Um mecanismo baseado em um handshake entre transações, chamado Abort handshake, é proposto como solução para o problema. Os resultados dos experimentos são dependentes da aplicação e configuração do sistema e indicam ganhos da TM na maioria dos casos em relação ao mecanismo de locks. Houve redução de até 30% no tempo de execução e de até 32% na energia de aplicações de baixa demanda de sincronização. Em um segundo momento, é feita uma análise do backoff delay on abort na performance e energia de aplicações utilizando três políticas de backoff em comparação com o mecanismo Abort handshake. Os resultados mostram que o mecanismo proposto apresenta redução de até 20% no tempo de execução e de até 53% na energia comparado à melhor política de backoff dentre as analisadas. Para aplicações com alta demanda de sincronização, a TM mostra redução no tempo de execução de até 63% e redução de energia de até 71% em comparação com o mecanismo de locks. / Transactional Memory (TM) has emerged in the last years as a new solution for synchronization on shared memory multiprocessor systems, allowing a better exploration of the parallelism of the applications by avoiding inherent limitations of the lock mechanism. In this model, the programmer defines regions of code, called transactions, to execute atomically. The system tries to execute transactions concurrently, but in case of conflict on memory accesses, it takes the appropriate measures to preserve the atomicity and isolation, usually aborting and re-executing one of the transactions. One of the most accepted hardware transactional memory model is LogTM, implemented in this work in an embedded MPSoC that uses an NoC as interconnection mechanism. The experiments compare this implementation with locks, considering performance and energy. Furthermore, this work shows that the time a transaction waits to restart after abort (called backoff delay on abort) has significant impact on performance and energy. An analysis of this impact is done using three backoff policies. A novel mechanism based on handshake of transactions, called Abort handshake, is proposed as a solution to this issue. The results of the experiments depends on application and system configuration and show TM benefits in most cases in comparison to the locks mechanism, reaching reduction on the execution time up to 30% and reduction on the energy consumption up to 32% on low contention workloads. After that, an analysis of the backoff delay on abort on the performance and energy is presented, comparing to the Abort handshake mechanism. The proposed mechanism shows reduction of up to 20% on the execution time and up to 53% on the energy, when compared to the best backoff policy. For applications with a high degree of synchronization, TM shows reduction on the execution time up to 63% and energy savings up to 71% compared to locks.
9

Efficient Compiler and Runtime Support for Serializability and Strong Semantics on Commodity Hardware

Sengupta, Aritra 07 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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