Abstract

Dense matrix multiply (MM) serves as one of the most heavily used kernels in deep learning applications. To cope with the high computation demands of these applications, heterogeneous architectures featuring both FPGA and dedicated ASIC accelerators have emerged as promising platforms. For example, the AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP architecture combines general-purpose CPU cores and programmable logic with AI Engine processors optimized for AI/ML. An array of 400 AI Engine processors executing at 1 GHz can provide up to 6.4 TFLOPS performance for 32-bit floating-point (FP32) data. However, machine learning models often contain both large and small MM operations. While large MM operations can be parallelized efficiently across many cores, small MM operations typically cannot. We observe that executing some small MM layers from the BERT natural language processing model on a large, monolithic MM accelerator in Versal ACAP achieved less than 5% of the theoretical peak performance. Therefore, one key question arises: How can we design accelerators to fully use the abundant computation resources under limited communication bandwidth for end-to-end applications with multiple MM layers of diverse sizes? We identify the biggest system throughput bottleneck resulting from the mismatch between the massive computation resources of one monolithic accelerator and the various MM layers of small sizes in the application. To resolve this problem, we propose the CHARM framework to compose multiple diverse MM accelerator architectures working concurrently on different layers within one application. CHARM includes analytical models that guide design space exploration to determine accelerator partitions and layer scheduling. To facilitate system designs, CHARM automatically generates code, enabling thorough onboard design verification. We deploy the CHARM framework on four different deep learning applications in FP32, INT16, and INT8 data types, including BERT, ViT, NCF, and MLP, on the AMD/Xilinx Versal ACAP VCK190 evaluation board. Our experiments show that we achieve 1.46 TFLOPS, 1.61 TFLOPS, 1.74 TFLOPS, and 2.94 TFLOPS inference throughput for BERT, ViT, NCF, and MLP in FP32 data type, respectively, which obtain 5.29 \(\times\) , 32.51 \(\times\) , 1.00 \(\times\) , and 1.00 \(\times\) throughput gains compared to one monolithic accelerator. CHARM achieves the maximum throughput of 1.91 TOPS, 1.18 TOPS, 4.06 TOPS, and 5.81 TOPS in the INT16 data type for the four applications. The maximum throughput achieved by CHARM in the INT8 data type is 3.65 TOPS, 1.28 TOPS, 10.19 TOPS, and 21.58 TOPS, respectively. We have open-sourced our tools, including detailed step-by-step guides to reproduce all the results presented in this article and to enable other users to learn and leverage CHARM framework and tools in their end-to-end systems: https://github.com/arc-research-lab/CHARM .

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