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Core level thermal estimation techniques for early design space explorationGandhi, Darshan Dhimantkumar 18 September 2014 (has links)
The primary objective of this thesis is to develop a methodology for fast, yet accurate temperature estimation during design space exploration. Power and temperature of modern day systems have become important metrics in addition to performance. Static and dynamic power dissipation leads to an increase in temperature, which creates cooling and packaging issues. Furthermore, the transient thermal profile determines temperature gradients, hotspots and thermal cycles. Traditional solutions rely on cycle-accurate simulations of detailed micro-architectural structures and are slow. The thesis shows that the periodic power estimation is the key bottleneck in such approaches. It also demonstrates an approach (FastSpot) that integrates accurate thermal estimation into existing host-compiled simulations. The developed methodology can incorporate different sampling-based thermal models. It achieves a 32000x increase in simulation throughput for temperature trace generation, while incurring low measurement errors (0.06 K- transient,0.014 K- steady-state) compared to a cycle-accurate reference method. / text
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Dynamic time management for improved accuracy and speed in host-compiled multi-core platform modelsRazaghi, Parisa 07 July 2014 (has links)
With increasing complexity and software content, modern embedded platforms employ a heterogeneous mix of multi-core processors along with hardware accelerators in order to provide high performance in limited power budgets. Due to complex interactions and highly dynamic behavior, static analysis of real-time performance and other constraints is challenging. As an alternative, full-system simulations have been widely accepted by designers. With traditional approaches being either slow or inaccurate, so-called host-compiled simulators have recently emerged as a solution for rapid evaluation of complete systems at early design stages. In such approaches, a faster simulation is achieved by natively executing application code at the source level, abstracting execution behavior of target platforms, and thus increasing simulation granularity. However, most existing host-compiled simulators often focus on application behavior only while neglecting effects of hardware/software interactions and associated speed and accuracy tradeoffs in platform modeling. In this dissertation, we focus on host-compiled operating system (OS) and processor modeling techniques, and we introduce novel dynamic timing model management approaches that efficiently improve both accuracy and speed of such models via automatically calibrating the simulation granularity. The contributions of this dissertation are twofold: We first establish an infrastructure for efficient host-compiled multi-core platform simulation by developing (a) abstract models of both real-time OSs and processors that replicate timing-accurate hardware/software interactions and enable full-system co-simulation, and (b) quantitative and analytical studies of host-compiled simulation principles to analyze error bounds and investigate possible improvements. Building on this infrastructure, we further propose specific techniques for improving accuracy and speed tradeoffs in host-compiled simulation by developing (c) an automatic timing granularity adjustment technique based on dynamically observing system state to control the simulation, (d) an out-of-order cache hierarchy modeling approach to efficiently reorder memory access behavior in the presence of temporal decoupling, and (e) a synchronized timing model to align platform threads to run efficiently in parallel simulation. Results as applied to industrial-strength platforms confirm that by providing careful abstractions and dynamic timing management, our models can achieve full-system simulations at equivalent speeds of more than a thousand MIPS with less than 3% timing error. Coupled with the capability to easily adjust simulation parameters and configurations, this demonstrates the benefits of our platform models for early application development and exploration. / text
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ExtractCFG : a framework to enable accurate timing back annotation of C language source codeGoswami, Arindam 30 September 2011 (has links)
The current trend in embedded systems design is to move the initial
design and exploration phase to a higher level of abstraction, in order to tackle
the rapidly increasing complexity of embedded systems. One approach of
abstracting software development from the low level platform details is host-
compiled simulation. Characteristics of the target platform are represented in
a host-compiled simulation model by annotating the high level source code.
Compiler optimizations make accurate annotation of the code a challenging
task. In this thesis, we describe an approach to enable correct back-annotation
of C code at the basic block level, while taking compiler optimizations into
account. / text
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