Abstract
Improving result accuracy in approximate computing (AC)-based real-time applications without violating deadlines has recently become an active research domain. Execution time of AC real-time tasks can individually be separated into: execution of the mandatory part to obtain a result of acceptable quality, followed by a partial/complete execution of the optional part to improve the result accuracy of the initial result within a given deadline. However, obtaining higher result accuracy at the cost of enhanced execution time may lead to deadline violation, along with higher energy usage. We present ACCURATE, a novel hybrid offline–online approximate real-time scheduling approach that first schedules AC-based tasks on multicore with an objective to maximize result accuracy and determines operational processing speeds for each task constrained by system-wide power limit, deadline, and task dependency. At runtime, by employing a way-sharing technique (WH_LLC) at the last level cache (LLC), ACCURATE improves performance, which is further leveraged, to enhance result accuracy by executing more from the optional part and to improve the energy efficiency of the cache by turning off a controlled number of cache ways. ACCURATE also exploits the slacks either to improve the result accuracy of the tasks or to enhance the energy efficiency of the underlying system, or both. ACCURATE achieves 85% QoS with 36% average reduction in cache leakage consumption with a 24% average gain in energy-delay product (EDP) for a 4-core-based chip multiprocessor (CMP) with 6.4% average improvement in performance.
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More From: IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems
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