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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

Increasing TLB reach using TCAM cells

Kumar, Anuj 17 February 2005 (has links)
We propose dynamic aggregation of virtual tags in TLB to increase its coverage and improve the overall miss ratio during address translation. Dynamic aggregation exploits both the spatial and temporal locality inherent in most application programs. To support dynamic aggregation, we introduce the use of ternary-CAM (TCAM) cells at the second-level TLB. The modified TLB architecture results in an increase of TLB reach without additional CAM entries. We also adopt bulk prefetching concurrently with aggregation technique to enhance the benefits due to spatial locality. The performance of the proposed TLB architecture is evaluated using SPEC2000 benchmarks concentrating on those that show high data TLB miss ratios. Simulation results indicate a reduction in miss ratios between 59% and 99.99% for all the considered bench-marks except for one benchmark, which has a reduction of 10%. We show that the L2 TLB when enhanced using TCAM cells is an attractive solution to high miss ratios exhibited by applications.
2

Increasing TLB reach using TCAM cells

Kumar, Anuj 17 February 2005 (has links)
We propose dynamic aggregation of virtual tags in TLB to increase its coverage and improve the overall miss ratio during address translation. Dynamic aggregation exploits both the spatial and temporal locality inherent in most application programs. To support dynamic aggregation, we introduce the use of ternary-CAM (TCAM) cells at the second-level TLB. The modified TLB architecture results in an increase of TLB reach without additional CAM entries. We also adopt bulk prefetching concurrently with aggregation technique to enhance the benefits due to spatial locality. The performance of the proposed TLB architecture is evaluated using SPEC2000 benchmarks concentrating on those that show high data TLB miss ratios. Simulation results indicate a reduction in miss ratios between 59% and 99.99% for all the considered bench-marks except for one benchmark, which has a reduction of 10%. We show that the L2 TLB when enhanced using TCAM cells is an attractive solution to high miss ratios exhibited by applications.
3

Exploiting the Computational Power of Ternary Content Addressable Memory

Tirdad, Kamran January 2011 (has links)
Ternary Content Addressable Memory or in short TCAM is a special type of memory that can execute a certain set of operations in parallel on all of its words. Because of power consumption and relatively small storage capacity, it has only been used in special environments. Over the past few years its cost has been reduced and its storage capacity has increased signifi cantly and these exponential trends are continuing. Hence it can be used in more general environments for larger problems. In this research we study how to exploit its computational power in order to speed up fundamental problems and needless to say that we barely scratched the surface. The main problems that has been addressed in our research are namely Boolean matrix multiplication, approximate subset queries using bloom filters, Fixed universe priority queues and network flow classi cation. For Boolean matrix multiplication our simple algorithm has a run time of O (d(N^2)/w) where N is the size of the square matrices, w is the number of bits in each word of TCAM and d is the maximum number of ones in a row of one of the matrices. For the Fixed universe priority queue problems we propose two data structures one with constant time complexity and space of O((1/ε)n(U^ε)) and the other one in linear space and amortized time complexity of O((lg lg U)/(lg lg lg U)) which beats the best possible data structure in the RAM model namely Y-fast trees. Considering each word of TCAM as a bloom filter, we modify the hash functions of the bloom filter and propose a data structure which can use the information capacity of each word of TCAM more efi ciently by using the co-occurrence probability of possible members. And finally in the last chapter we propose a novel technique for network flow classi fication using TCAM.
4

IP routing lookup: hardware and software approach

Chakaravarthy, Ravikumar V. 29 August 2005 (has links)
The work presented in this thesis is motivated by the dual goal of developing a scalable and efficient approach for IP lookup using both hardware and software approach. The work involved designing algorithms and techniques to increase the capacity and flexibility of the Internet. The Internet is comprised of routers that forward the Internet packets to the destination address and the physical links that transfer data from one router to another. The optical technologies have improved significantly over the years and hence the data link capacities have increased. However, the packet forwarding rates at the router have failed to keep up with the link capacities. Every router performs a packet-forwarding decision on the incoming packet to determine the packet??s next-hop router. This is achieved by looking up the destination address of the incoming packet in the forwarding table. Besides increased inter-packet arrival rates, the increasing routing table sizes and complexity of forwarding algorithms have made routers a bottleneck in the packet transmission across the Internet. A number of solutions have been proposed that have addressed this problem. The solutions have been categorized into hardware and software solutions. Various lookup algorithms have been proposed to tackle this problem using software approaches. These approaches have proved more scalable and practicable. However, they don??t seem to be able to catch up with the link rates. The first part of my thesis discusses one such software solution for routing lookup. The hardware approaches today have been able to match up with the link speeds. However, these solutions are unable to keep up with the increasing number of routing table entries and the power consumed. The second part of my thesis describes a hardware-based solution that provides a bound on the power consumption and reduces the number of entries required to be stored in the routing table.
5

Exploiting the Computational Power of Ternary Content Addressable Memory

Tirdad, Kamran January 2011 (has links)
Ternary Content Addressable Memory or in short TCAM is a special type of memory that can execute a certain set of operations in parallel on all of its words. Because of power consumption and relatively small storage capacity, it has only been used in special environments. Over the past few years its cost has been reduced and its storage capacity has increased signifi cantly and these exponential trends are continuing. Hence it can be used in more general environments for larger problems. In this research we study how to exploit its computational power in order to speed up fundamental problems and needless to say that we barely scratched the surface. The main problems that has been addressed in our research are namely Boolean matrix multiplication, approximate subset queries using bloom filters, Fixed universe priority queues and network flow classi cation. For Boolean matrix multiplication our simple algorithm has a run time of O (d(N^2)/w) where N is the size of the square matrices, w is the number of bits in each word of TCAM and d is the maximum number of ones in a row of one of the matrices. For the Fixed universe priority queue problems we propose two data structures one with constant time complexity and space of O((1/ε)n(U^ε)) and the other one in linear space and amortized time complexity of O((lg lg U)/(lg lg lg U)) which beats the best possible data structure in the RAM model namely Y-fast trees. Considering each word of TCAM as a bloom filter, we modify the hash functions of the bloom filter and propose a data structure which can use the information capacity of each word of TCAM more efi ciently by using the co-occurrence probability of possible members. And finally in the last chapter we propose a novel technique for network flow classi fication using TCAM.
6

Towards more power efficient IP lookup engines

Ahmad, Seraj 25 April 2007 (has links)
The IP lookup in internet routers requires implementation of the longest prefix match algorithm. The software or hardware implementations of routing trie based approaches require several memory accesses in order to perform a single memory lookup, which limits the throughput considerably. On the other hand, IP lookup throughput requirements have been continuously increasing. This has led to ternary content addressable memory(TCAM) based IP lookup engines which can perform a single lookup every cycle. TCAM lookup engines are very power hungry due to the large number of entries which need to be simultaneously searched. This has led to two disparate streams of research into power reduction techniques. The first research stream focuses on the routing table compaction using logic minimization techniques. The second stream focuses on routing table partitioning. This work proposes to bridge the gap by employing strategies to combine these two leading state of the art schemes. The existing partitioning algorithms are generally employed on a binary routing trie precluding their application to a compacted routing table. The proposed scheme employs a ternary routing trie to facilitate the representation of the minimized routing table in combination with the ternary trie partitioning algorithm. The combined scheme offers up to 50% reduction in silicon area while maintaining the power economy of the partitioning scheme.
7

MicroCuckoo Hash Engine for High-Speed IP Lookup

Tata, Nikhitha 23 June 2017 (has links)
The internet data traffic is tripling every two years due to the exponential growth in the number of routers. Routers implement the packet classification methodology by determining the flow of the packet, based on various rule checking mechanisms that are performed on the packet headers. However, the memory components like TCAMs used by these various rules are very expensive and power hungry. Henceforth, the current IP Lookup algorithms implemented in hardware are even though able to achieve multi-gigabit speeds, yet suffer with great memory overhead. To overcome this limitation, we propose a packet classification methodology that comprises of MicroCuckoo-hash technique, to route packets. This approach alleviates the memory requirements significantly, by completely eliminating the need for TCAM cells. Cuckoo hash is used to achieve very high speed, hardware accelerated table lookups and also are economical compared to TCAMs. The proposed IP Lookup algorithm is implemented as a simulation-based hardware/software model. This model is developed, tested and synthesized using Vivado HLS tool. / Master of Science / The internet data traffic is tripling every two years; due to the exponential growth in the number of routers. Routers implement the packet classification methodology by determining the flow of the packet, based on various rule checking mechanisms that are performed on the packet headers. However, the memory components like TCAMs used by these various rules are very expensive and power hungry. Henceforth, the current IP Lookup algorithms implemented in hardware are even though able to achieve multi-gigabit speeds, yet suffer with great memory overhead. To overcome this limitation, we propose a packet classification methodology that comprises of MicroCuckoo-hash technique, to route packets. This approach alleviates the memory requirements significantly, by completely eliminating the need for TCAM cells. Cuckoo hash is used to achieve very high speed, hardware accelerated table lookups and also are economical compared to TCAMs. The proposed IP Lookup algorithm is implemented as a simulation-based hardware/software model. This model is developed, tested and synthesized using Vivado HLS tool.
8

Protecting Vehicles from Remote Attackers with Firewalls and Switched Networks

Allen, Evan Nathaniel 16 May 2024 (has links)
Remote attacks on vehicles have become alarmingly more common over the past decade. Attackers often can compromise a single Electronic Control Unit (ECU) in the In-Vehicle Network (IVN) and then use it to send malicious messages that can cause a vehicle to stop, turn, or even crash. It is critical that we find a way to block or discard these messages. However, current IVNs contain few measures to prevent such threats. Most research in this area focuses on cryptography-based approaches that are too slow or too expensive for vehicle applications. In this thesis, we explore how we can stop many of these remote attacks without cryptography. We define a `security policy' that describes what messages are allowed in an IVN and then create a system of distributed firewalls to enforce it, blocking many remote attacks. Using newer, switched IVN topologies, we can authenticate messages with nearly zero additional overhead and implement our system with minimal changes to each ECU. This places the security responsibility on a few centralized network devices that automakers can more easily control and update, even after a vehicle is sold. We evaluate our firewall design using a network simulator and find that our approach is significantly faster than state-of-the-art cryptographic approaches. / Master of Science / Over the past decade, hackers and security researchers have found many ways to remotely take control of a vehicle. Most modern vehicles contain numerous Electronic Control Units (ECUs) that each control some aspect of the vehicle, such as the brakes or engine. It is difficult to design all ECUs perfectly, however, and attackers are often able to remotely hack into one of them. From there, attackers can send malicious messages throughout the In-Vehicle Network (IVN) that connects ECUs. These messages can cause the car to stop, turn, or even crash. Thus, we must find a way to block or discard these messages. Most current research uses cryptography to accomplish this, which is a computationally expensive technique that uses math to determine if messages are legitimate. In this thesis, we examine how we can stop these malicious messages without cryptography. We introduce an approach based on firewalls, which are devices in the network that inspect messages and block them if they do not pass a set of rules. Our approach, which leverages new trends in IVN architectures, allows us to stop many of these malicious messages in the network with nearly zero additional overhead. In addition, our system of firewalls is much easier for an automaker to manage and update than previous approaches. We simulate our idea and find that it is significantly faster than previous state-of-the-art techniques.
9

Performance Analysis of TCAMs in Switches

Tawakol, Abdel Maguid 25 April 2012 (has links)
The Catalyst 6500 is a modern commercial switch, capable of processing millions of packets per second through the utilization of specialized hardware. One of the main hardware components aiding the switch in performing its task is the Ternary Content Addressable Memory (TCAM). TCAMs update themselves with data relevant to routing and switching based on the traffic flowing through the switch. This enables the switch to forward future packets destined to a location that has already been previously discovered - at a very high speed. The problem is TCAMs have a limited size, and once they reach their capacity, the switch has to rely on software to perform the switching and routing - a much slower process than performing Hardware Switching that utilizes the TCAM. A framework has been developed to analyze the switch’s performance once the TCAM has reached its capacity, as well as measure the penalty associated with a cache miss. This thesis concludes with some recommendations and future work.
10

Performance Analysis of TCAMs in Switches

Tawakol, Abdel Maguid 25 April 2012 (has links)
The Catalyst 6500 is a modern commercial switch, capable of processing millions of packets per second through the utilization of specialized hardware. One of the main hardware components aiding the switch in performing its task is the Ternary Content Addressable Memory (TCAM). TCAMs update themselves with data relevant to routing and switching based on the traffic flowing through the switch. This enables the switch to forward future packets destined to a location that has already been previously discovered - at a very high speed. The problem is TCAMs have a limited size, and once they reach their capacity, the switch has to rely on software to perform the switching and routing - a much slower process than performing Hardware Switching that utilizes the TCAM. A framework has been developed to analyze the switch’s performance once the TCAM has reached its capacity, as well as measure the penalty associated with a cache miss. This thesis concludes with some recommendations and future work.

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