Abstract

Transient faults or soft errors are considered one of the most daunting reliability challenges for microprocessors. Software solutions for soft error protection are attractive because they can provide flexible and effective error protection. For instance, nZDC [1] state-of-the-art instruction duplication error protection scheme achieves a high degree of error detection by verifying the results of memory write operations and utilizes an effective control-flow checking mechanism. However, nZDC control-flow checking mechanism is architecture-dependent and suffers from some vulnerability holes. In this work, we address these issues by substituting nZDC control-flow checking mechanism with a general (ISA-independent) scheme and propose two transformations, coarse-grained scheduling, and asymmetric control-flow signatures, for hard-to-detect control flow errors. Fault injection experiments on different hardware components of synthesizable Verilog description of an OpenRISC-based microprocessor reveal that the proposed transformation shows 85% less silent data corruptions compared to nZDC. In addition, programs protected by the proposed scheme run on average around 37% faster than nZDC-protected programs.

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