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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

Operating System Management of Shared Caches on Multicore Processors

Tam, David Kar Fai 01 September 2010 (has links)
Our thesis is that operating systems should manage the on-chip shared caches of multicore processors for the purposes of achieving performance gains. Consequently, this dissertation demonstrates how the operating system can profitably manage these shared caches. Two shared-cache management principles are investigated: (1) promoting shared use of the shared cache, demonstrated by an automated online thread clustering technique, and (2) providing cache space isolation, demonstrated by a software-based cache partitioning technique. In support of providing isolation, cache provisioning is also investigated, demonstrated by an automated online technique called RapidMRC. We show how these software-based techniques are feasible on existing multicore systems with the help of their hardware performance monitoring units and their associated hardware performance counters. On a 2-chip IBM POWER5 multicore system, promoting sharing reduced processor pipeline stalls caused by cross-chip cache accesses by up to 70%, resulting in performance improvements of up to 7%. On a larger 8-chip IBM POWER5+ multicore system, the potential for up to 14% performance improvement was measured. Providing isolation improved performance by up to 50%, using an exhaustive offline search method to determine optimal partition size. On the other hand, up to 27% performance improvement was extracted from the corresponding workload using an automated online approximation technique, made possible by RapidMRC.
2

Operating System Management of Shared Caches on Multicore Processors

Tam, David Kar Fai 01 September 2010 (has links)
Our thesis is that operating systems should manage the on-chip shared caches of multicore processors for the purposes of achieving performance gains. Consequently, this dissertation demonstrates how the operating system can profitably manage these shared caches. Two shared-cache management principles are investigated: (1) promoting shared use of the shared cache, demonstrated by an automated online thread clustering technique, and (2) providing cache space isolation, demonstrated by a software-based cache partitioning technique. In support of providing isolation, cache provisioning is also investigated, demonstrated by an automated online technique called RapidMRC. We show how these software-based techniques are feasible on existing multicore systems with the help of their hardware performance monitoring units and their associated hardware performance counters. On a 2-chip IBM POWER5 multicore system, promoting sharing reduced processor pipeline stalls caused by cross-chip cache accesses by up to 70%, resulting in performance improvements of up to 7%. On a larger 8-chip IBM POWER5+ multicore system, the potential for up to 14% performance improvement was measured. Providing isolation improved performance by up to 50%, using an exhaustive offline search method to determine optimal partition size. On the other hand, up to 27% performance improvement was extracted from the corresponding workload using an automated online approximation technique, made possible by RapidMRC.

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