A multi-pronged approach to benchmark characterization
Other conference contribution, 2010

Understanding the behavior of current and future workloads is key for designers of future computer systems. If target workload characteristics are available, computer designers can use this information to optimize the system. This can lead to a chicken-and-egg problem: how does one characterize application behavior for an architecture that is a moving target and for which sophisticated modeling tools do not yet exist? We present a multi-pronged approach to benchmark characterization early in the design cycle. We collect statistics from multiple sources and combine them to create a comprehensive view of application behavior. We assume a fixed part of the system (service core) and a "to-be-designed" part that will gradually be developed under the measurements taken on the fixed part. Data are collected from measurements taken on existing hardware and statistics are obtained via emulation tools. These are supplemented with statistics extracted from traces and ILP information generated by the compiler. Although the motivation for this work is the classification of workloads for an embedded, reconfigurable, parallel architecture, the methodology can easily be adapted to other platforms. © 2010 IEEE.

Author

N. Puzovic

University of Siena

Sally A McKee

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Computer Engineering (Chalmers)

R. Eres

IBM Haifa Labs

A. Zaks

IBM Haifa Labs

P. Gai

S. Wong

Delft University of Technology

R. Giorgi

University of Siena

2010 IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing Workshops and Posters, Cluster Workshops 2010

5613090
978-142448396-9 (ISBN)

Subject Categories

Computer and Information Science

DOI

10.1109/CLUSTERWKSP.2010.5613090

ISBN

978-142448396-9

More information

Latest update

9/6/2018 1