File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

A New Methodology for Reduced Cost of Resilience

Author(s)
Kang, SeokhyeongKahng, Andrew B.Li, Jiajia
Issued Date
2014-05-22
DOI
10.1145/2591513.2591600
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/46739
Fulltext
https://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=2591513.2591600
Citation
24th Great Lakes Symposium on VLSI, GLSVLSI 2014, pp.157 - 162
Abstract
Resilient design techniques are used to (i) ensure correct operation under dynamic variations; and (ii) improve design performance (e.g., through timing speculation). However, significant overheads (e.g., 17% and 15% energy penalties due to throughput degradation and additional circuits) are incurred by existing resilient design techniques. For instance, resilient designs require additional circuits to detect and correct timing errors. Further, when there is an error, the additional cycles needed to restore a previous correct state degrade throughput, which diminishes the performance benefit of using resilient designs. In this work, we propose a methodology for resilient design implementation to minimize the costs of resilience in terms of power, area and throughput degradation. Our methodology uses two levers: selective-endpoint optimization (i.e., sensitivity-based margin insertion) and clock skew optimization. We integrate the two optimization techniques in an iterative optimization flow which comprehends toggle rate information and the tradeoff between cost of resilience and margin on combinational paths. Our proposed flow achieves energy reductions of up to 19% and 21% compared to a conventional design (with only margin used to attain robustness) and a brute-force implementation, respectively. These benefits increase in the context of an adaptive voltage scaling strategy.
Publisher
24th Great Lakes Symposium on VLSI, GLSVLSI 2014

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.