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Dynamic Reconfigurable Architectures and Transparent Optimization Techniques [electronic resource] : Automatic Acceleration of Software Execution / by Antonio Carlos Schneider Beck Fl., Luigi Carro.

By: Schneider Beck Fl., Antonio Carlos [author.].
Contributor(s): Carro, Luigi [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2010Description: XVII, 225p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9789048139132.Subject(s): Engineering | Computer science | Systems engineering | Engineering | Circuits and Systems | Processor ArchitecturesDDC classification: 621.3815 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Reconfigurable Systems -- Deployment of Reconfigurable Systems -- Dynamic Optimization Techniques -- Dynamic Detection and Reconfiguration -- The DIM Reconfigurable System -- Conclusions and Future Trends.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: As Moore’s law is losing steam, one already sees the phenomenon of clock frequency reduction caused by the excessive power dissipation in general purpose processors. At the same time, embedded systems are concentrating several heterogeneous applications in a single device, and hence new architectural alternatives are necessary. Reconfigurable computing has already shown to be a potential solution when it comes to accelerate specific code with a small power budget, but significant speedups are achieved only in very dedicated dataflow oriented software, without capturing the reality of nowadays complex heterogeneous systems. Moreover, any architecture solution should be able to execute legacy code, since there is already a large base of applications and standards. Dynamic Reconfigurable Architectures and Transparent Optimization Techniques presents a detailed study on new techniques to cope with the aforementioned limitations. First, characteristics of reconfigurable systems are discussed in details, and a large number of case studies is shown. Then, a detailed analysis of several benchmarks demonstrates that such architectures need to attack a diverse range of applications with very different behaviours, besides supporting code compatibility. This requires the use of dynamic optimization techniques, such as Binary Translation and Trace reuse. Finally, works that combine both reconfigurable systems and dynamic techniques are discussed and a quantitative analysis of one them, the DIM architecture, is presented.
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Reconfigurable Systems -- Deployment of Reconfigurable Systems -- Dynamic Optimization Techniques -- Dynamic Detection and Reconfiguration -- The DIM Reconfigurable System -- Conclusions and Future Trends.

As Moore’s law is losing steam, one already sees the phenomenon of clock frequency reduction caused by the excessive power dissipation in general purpose processors. At the same time, embedded systems are concentrating several heterogeneous applications in a single device, and hence new architectural alternatives are necessary. Reconfigurable computing has already shown to be a potential solution when it comes to accelerate specific code with a small power budget, but significant speedups are achieved only in very dedicated dataflow oriented software, without capturing the reality of nowadays complex heterogeneous systems. Moreover, any architecture solution should be able to execute legacy code, since there is already a large base of applications and standards. Dynamic Reconfigurable Architectures and Transparent Optimization Techniques presents a detailed study on new techniques to cope with the aforementioned limitations. First, characteristics of reconfigurable systems are discussed in details, and a large number of case studies is shown. Then, a detailed analysis of several benchmarks demonstrates that such architectures need to attack a diverse range of applications with very different behaviours, besides supporting code compatibility. This requires the use of dynamic optimization techniques, such as Binary Translation and Trace reuse. Finally, works that combine both reconfigurable systems and dynamic techniques are discussed and a quantitative analysis of one them, the DIM architecture, is presented.

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