Abstract
Excessive power consumption is widely considered as a major impediment to designing future microprocessors. With the continued scaling down of threshold voltages, the power consumed due to leaky memory cells in on-chip caches will constitute a significant portion of the processor's power budget. This work focuses on reducing the leakage energy consumed in the instruction cache using a compiler-directed approach. We present and analyze two compiler-based strategies termed as conservative and optimistic. The conservative approach does not put a cache line into a low leakage mode until it is certain that the current instruction in it is dead. On the other hand, the optimistic approach places a cache line in low leakage mode if it detects that the next access to the instruction will occur only after a long gap.We evaluate different optimization alternatives by combining the compiler strategies with state-preserving and state-destroying leakage control mechanisms.We also evaluate the sensitivity of these optimizations to different high-level compiler transformations, energy parameters, and soft errors. © 2004, ACM. All rights reserved.
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Zhang, W., Hu, J. S., Degalahal, V., Kandemir, M., Vijaykrishnan, N., & Irwin, M. J. (2004). Reducing Instruction Cache Energy Consumption Using a Compiler-Based Strategy. ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization, 1(1), 3–33. https://doi.org/10.1145/980152.980154
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