Characterizing the effects of intermittent faults on a processor for dependability enhancement strategy

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Abstract

As semiconductor technology scales into the nanometer regime, intermittent faults have become an increasing threat. This paper focuses on the effects of intermittent faults on NET versus REG on one hand and the implications for dependability strategy on the other. First, the vulnerability characteristics of representative units in OpenSPARC T2 are revealed, and in particular, the highly sensitive modules are identified. Second, an arch-level dependability enhancement strategy is proposed, showing that events such as core/strand running status and core-memory interface events can be candidates of detectable symptoms. A simple watchdog can be deployed to detect application running status (IEXE event). Then SDC (silent data corruption) rate is evaluated demonstrating its potential. Third and last, the effects of traditional protection schemes in the target CMT to intermittent faults are quantitatively studied on behalf of the contribution of each trap type, demonstrating the necessity of taking this factor into account for the strategy. © 2014 Chao(Saul) Wang et al.

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Wang, C., Fu, Z. C., Chen, H. S., & Wang, D. S. (2014). Characterizing the effects of intermittent faults on a processor for dependability enhancement strategy. Scientific World Journal, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/286084

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