Emergent Mind

Lightweight Soft Error Resilience for In-Order Cores

(2202.09444)
Published Feb 18, 2022 in cs.AR and cs.PL

Abstract

Acoustic-sensor-based soft error resilience is particularly promising, since it can verify the absence of soft errors and eliminate silent data corruptions at a low hardware cost. However, the state-of-the-art work incurs a significant performance overhead for in-order cores due to frequent structural/data hazards during the verification. To address the problem, this paper presents Turnpike, a compiler/architecture co-design scheme that can achieve lightweight yet guaranteed soft error resilience for in-order cores. The key idea is that many of the data computed in the core can bypass the soft error verification without compromising the resilience. Along with simple microarchitectural support for realizing the idea, Turnpike leverages compiler optimizations to further reduce the performance overhead. Experimental results with 36 benchmarks demonstrate that Turnpike only incurs a 0-14% run-time overhead on average while the state-of-the-art incurs a 29-84% overhead when the worst-case latency of the sensor based error detection is 10-50 cycles.

We're not able to analyze this paper right now due to high demand.

Please check back later (sorry!).

Generate a summary of this paper on our Pro plan:

We ran into a problem analyzing this paper.

Newsletter

Get summaries of trending comp sci papers delivered straight to your inbox:

Unsubscribe anytime.