Vishakha Gupta, Rob C. Knauerhase, P. Brett, K. Schwan
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Kinship: efficient resource management for performance and functionally asymmetric platforms
On-chip heterogeneity has become key to balancing performance and power constraints, resulting in disparate (functionally overlapping but not equivalent) cores on a single die. Requiring developers to deal with such heterogeneity can impede adoption through increased programming effort and result in cross-platform incompatibility. We propose that systems software must evolve to dynamically accommodate heterogeneity and to automatically choose task-to-resource mappings to best use these features. We describe the kinship approach for mapping workloads to heterogeneous cores. A hypervisor-level realization of the approach on a variety of experimental heterogeneous platforms demonstrates the general applicability and utility of kinship-based scheduling, matching dynamic workloads to available resources as well as scaling with the number of processes and with different types/configurations of compute resources. Performance advantages of kinship based scheduling are evident for runs across multiple generations of heterogeneous platforms.