Abstract

We present a high performance cache structure with a hardware prefetching mechanism that enhances exploitation of spatial and temporal locality. The proposed cache, which we call a selective-mode intelligent (SMI) cache, consists of three parts: a direct-mapped cache with a small block size, a fully associative spatial buffer with a large block size, and a hardware prefetching unit. Temporal locality is exploited by selectively moving small blocks into the direct-mapped cache after monitoring their activity in the spatial buffer for a time period. Spatial locality is enhanced by intelligently prefetching a neighboring block when a spatial buffer hit occurs. The overhead of this prefetching operation is shown to be negligible. We also show that the prefetch operation is highly accurate: Over 90 percent of all prefetches generated are for blocks that are subsequently accessed. Our results show that the system enables the cache size to be reduced by a factor of four to eight relative to a conventional direct-mapped cache while maintaining similar performance. Also, the SMI cache can reduce the miss ratio by around 20 percent and the average memory access time by 10 percent, compared with a victim-buffer cache configuration.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call