Abstract

Energy characterization is the basis for high-level energy reduction. Measurement-based characterization is accurate and independent of model availability and is thus suitable for commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components, but conventional measurement equipment has serious limitations in this context. We introduce a new technique for the energy characterization of a microprocessor using a cycle-accurate energy measurement system based on charge transfer which is robust to spiky noise and is able to collect a range of energy consumption profiles in real time. It measures the energy variation of the CPU core by changing the instruction-level energy-sensitive factors such as opcodes (operations), instruction fetch addresses, register numbers, register values, data fetch addresses and immediate operand values at each pipeline stage. Using the ARM7TDMI RISC processor as a case study, we observe that the energy contributions of most instruction-level energy-sensitive factors are orthogonal to the operations. We are able to characterize the energy variation, preserving all the effects of the energy-sensitive factors for various software methods of energy reduction. We also demonstrate applications of our measurement and characterization techniques.

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