Abstract
The appearance and wide use of memory hardware bring significant changes to the conventional vertical memory hierarchy that fails to handle contentions for shared hardware resources and expensive data movements. To deal with these problems, existing schemes have to rely on inefficient scheduling strategies that also cause extra temporal, spatial and bandwidth overheads. Based on the insights that the shared hardware resources trend to be uniformly and hierarchically offered to the requests for co-located applications in memory systems, we present an efficient abstraction of memory hierarchies, called Label, which is used to establish the connection between the application layer and underlying hardware layer. Based on labels, our paper proposes LaMem, a labeled, resource-isolated and cross-tiered memory system by leveraging the way-based partitioning technique for shared resources to guarantee QoS demands of applications, while supporting fast and low-overhead cache repartitioning technique. Besides, we customize LaMem for the learned index that fundamentally replaces storage structures with computation models as a case study to verify the applicability of LaMem. Experimental results demonstrate the efficiency and efficacy of LaMem.
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