A hardware/software co-design methodology for in-memory processors

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Abstract

The bottleneck between the processor and memory is the most significant barrier to the ongoing development of efficient processing systems. Therefore, a research effort begun to shift from processor-centric architectures to memory-centric architectures. Various in-memory processor architectures have been proposed to break this barrier to pave the way for ever-demanding memory-bound applications. Associative in-memory processing is a successful candidate for truly in-memory computing, in which processor and memory are combined in the same location to eliminate the expensive data access costs. The architecture exhibits an unmatched advantage for data-intensive applications due to its memory-centric design principles. On the other hand, this advantage can be revealed fully by an efficient design methodology. This study puts further progressive effort by proposing a hardware/software design methodology for associative in-memory processors. The methodology aims to decrease energy consumption and area requirement of the processor architecture specifically programmed to perform a given task. According to the evaluation of nine different benchmarks, such as fast Fourier transform and multiply-accumulate, the proposed design flow accomplishes an average ∼7% reduction in memory area and ∼18% savings in total energy consumption.

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Yantır, H. E., Eltawil, A. M., & Salama, K. N. (2022). A hardware/software co-design methodology for in-memory processors. Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing, 161, 63–71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpdc.2021.10.009

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