Byn Choi, Rakesh Komuravelli, Hyojin Sung, Robert Smolinski, N. Honarmand, S. Adve, Vikram S. Adve, N. Carter, Ching-Tsun Chou
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We show how a disciplined parallel programming model greatly simplifies cache coherence and consistency, while enabling a more efficient communication and cache architecture. The DeNovo coherence protocol is simple because it eliminates transient states -- verification using model checking shows 15X fewer reachable states than a state-of-the-art implementation of the conventional MESI protocol. The DeNovo protocol is also more extensible. Adding two sophisticated optimizations, flexible communication granularity and direct cache-to-cache transfers, did not introduce additional protocol states (unlike MESI). Finally, DeNovo shows better cache hit rates and network traffic, translating to better performance and energy. Overall, a disciplined shared-memory programming model allows DeNovo to seamlessly integrate message passing-like interactions within a global address space for improved design complexity, performance, and efficiency.","PeriodicalId":106423,"journal":{"name":"2011 International Conference on Parallel Architectures and Compilation Techniques","volume":"26 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-10-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"173","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"DeNovo: Rethinking the Memory Hierarchy for Disciplined Parallelism\",\"authors\":\"Byn Choi, Rakesh Komuravelli, Hyojin Sung, Robert Smolinski, N. Honarmand, S. Adve, Vikram S. Adve, N. 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The DeNovo coherence protocol is simple because it eliminates transient states -- verification using model checking shows 15X fewer reachable states than a state-of-the-art implementation of the conventional MESI protocol. The DeNovo protocol is also more extensible. Adding two sophisticated optimizations, flexible communication granularity and direct cache-to-cache transfers, did not introduce additional protocol states (unlike MESI). Finally, DeNovo shows better cache hit rates and network traffic, translating to better performance and energy. 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DeNovo: Rethinking the Memory Hierarchy for Disciplined Parallelism
For parallelism to become tractable for mass programmers, shared-memory languages and environments must evolve to enforce disciplined practices that ban "wild shared-memory behaviors;'' e.g., unstructured parallelism, arbitrary data races, and ubiquitous non-determinism. This software evolution is a rare opportunity for hardware designers to rethink hardware from the ground up to exploit opportunities exposed by such disciplined software models. Such a co-designed effort is more likely to achieve many-core scalability than a software-oblivious hardware evolution. This paper presents DeNovo, a hardware architecture motivated by these observations. We show how a disciplined parallel programming model greatly simplifies cache coherence and consistency, while enabling a more efficient communication and cache architecture. The DeNovo coherence protocol is simple because it eliminates transient states -- verification using model checking shows 15X fewer reachable states than a state-of-the-art implementation of the conventional MESI protocol. The DeNovo protocol is also more extensible. Adding two sophisticated optimizations, flexible communication granularity and direct cache-to-cache transfers, did not introduce additional protocol states (unlike MESI). Finally, DeNovo shows better cache hit rates and network traffic, translating to better performance and energy. Overall, a disciplined shared-memory programming model allows DeNovo to seamlessly integrate message passing-like interactions within a global address space for improved design complexity, performance, and efficiency.