Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento:
http://hdl.handle.net/10553/50502
Título: | Reducing fetch architecture complexity using procedure inlining | Autores/as: | Santana, Oliverio J. Ramirez, Alex Valero, Mateo |
Clasificación UNESCO: | 330406 Arquitectura de ordenadores | Fecha de publicación: | 2004 | Resumen: | Fetch engine performance is seriously limited by the branch prediction table access latency. This fact has lead to the development of hardware mechanisms, like prediction overriding, aimed to tolerate this latency. However, prediction overriding requires additional support and recovery mechanisms, which increases the fetch architecture complexity. In this paper, we show that this increase in complexity can be avoided if the interaction between the fetch architecture and software code optimizations is taken into account. We use aggressive procedure inlining to generate long streams of instructions that are used by the fetch engine as the basic prediction unit. We call instruction stream to a sequence of instructions from the target of a taken branch to the next taken branch. These instruction streams are long enough to feed the execution engine with instructions during multiple cycles, while a new stream prediction is being generated, and thus hiding the prediction table access latency. Our results show that the length of instruction streams compensates the increase in the instruction cache miss rate caused by inlining. We show that, using procedure inlining, the need for a prediction overriding mechanism is avoided, reducing the fetch engine complexity. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/50502 | ISBN: | 978-0-7695-2061-2 | DOI: | 10.1109/INTERA.2004.1299514 | Fuente: | Proceedings - Eighth Workshop on Interaction between Compilers and Computer Architectures, INTERACT-8 2004, p. 97-106 |
Colección: | Actas de congresos |
Citas SCOPUSTM
3
actualizado el 17-nov-2024
Visitas
71
actualizado el 27-ene-2024
Google ScholarTM
Verifica
Altmetric
Comparte
Exporta metadatos
Los elementos en ULPGC accedaCRIS están protegidos por derechos de autor con todos los derechos reservados, a menos que se indique lo contrario.