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conference paper

Accurate and complexity-effective spatial pattern prediction

Chen, Chi F.
•
Yang, Se-Hyun
•
Falsafi, Babak  
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2004
Proceedings of the International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture

Recent research suggests that there are large variations in a cache's spatial usage, both within and across programs. Unfortunately, conventional caches typically employ fixed cache line sizes to balance the exploitation of spatial and temporal locality, and to avoid prohibitive cache fill bandwidth demands. The resulting inability of conventional caches to exploit spatial variations leads to sub-optimal performance and unnecessary cache power dissipation. This paper describes the Spatial Pattern Predictor (SPP), a cost-effective hardware mechanism that accurately predicts reference patterns within a spatial group (i.e., a contiguous region of data in memory) at runtime. The key observation enabling an accurate, yet low-cost, SPP design is that spatial patterns correlate well with instruction addresses and data reference offsets within a cache line. We require only a small amount of predictor memory to store the predicted patterns. Simulation results for a 64-Kbyte 2-way set- associative L1 data cache with 64-byte lines show that: (1) a 256-entry tag- less direct-mapped SPP can achieve, on average, a prediction coverage of 95%, over-predicting the patterns by only 8%, (2) assuming a 70nm process technology, the SPP helps reduce leakage energy in the base cache by 41% on average, incurring less than 1% performance degradation, and (3) prefetching spatial groups of up to 512 bytes using SPP improves execution time by 33% on average and up to a factor of two.

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Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Chen, Chi F.
Yang, Se-Hyun
Falsafi, Babak  
Moshovos, Andreas
Date Issued

2004

Published in
Proceedings of the International Symposium on High-Performance Computer Architecture
Start page

276

End page

287

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
PARSA  
Event placeEvent date
Available on Infoscience
April 6, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/36939
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