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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A scalable processing-in-memory accelerator for parallel graph processing

TLDR
This work argues that the conventional concept of processing-in-memory (PIM) can be a viable solution to achieve memory-capacity-proportional performance and designs a programmable PIM accelerator for large-scale graph processing called Tesseract.
Abstract
The explosion of digital data and the ever-growing need for fast data analysis have made in-memory big-data processing in computer systems increasingly important. In particular, large-scale graph processing is gaining attention due to its broad applicability from social science to machine learning. However, scalable hardware design that can efficiently process large graphs in main memory is still an open problem. Ideally, cost-effective and scalable graph processing systems can be realized by building a system whose performance increases proportionally with the sizes of graphs that can be stored in the system, which is extremely challenging in conventional systems due to severe memory bandwidth limitations. In this work, we argue that the conventional concept of processing-in-memory (PIM) can be a viable solution to achieve such an objective. The key modern enabler for PIM is the recent advancement of the 3D integration technology that facilitates stacking logic and memory dies in a single package, which was not available when the PIM concept was originally examined. In order to take advantage of such a new technology to enable memory-capacity-proportional performance, we design a programmable PIM accelerator for large-scale graph processing called Tesseract. Tesseract is composed of (1) a new hardware architecture that fully utilizes the available memory bandwidth, (2) an efficient method of communication between different memory partitions, and (3) a programming interface that reflects and exploits the unique hardware design. It also includes two hardware prefetchers specialized for memory access patterns of graph processing, which operate based on the hints provided by our programming model. Our comprehensive evaluations using five state-of-the-art graph processing workloads with large real-world graphs show that the proposed architecture improves average system performance by a factor of ten and achieves 87% average energy reduction over conventional systems.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Leveraging 3D Technologies for Hardware Security: Opportunities and Challenges

TL;DR: A 3D architecture for shielding side-channel information; a split fabrication using active interposers; circuit camouflage on monolithic 3D IC, and3D IC-based security processing-in-memory (PIM) are presented, showing that the new designs can improve existing counter-measures against security threats and further provide new security features.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

PolyGraph: exposing the value of flexibility for graph processing accelerators

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the value of flexibility in graph processing accelerators and develop a template architecture (PolyGraph) that is flexible across these variants while being able to modularly integrate specialization features for each.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adaptive scheduling for systems with asymmetric memory hierarchies

TL;DR: AMS is presented, an adaptive scheduler that automatically finds high-quality thread-to-hierarchy mappings and outperforms asymmetry-oblivious schedulers by up to 37% and by 18% on average.
Book

On-Chip Networks: Second Edition

TL;DR: This book targets engineers and researchers familiar with basic computer architecture concepts who are interested in learning about on-chip networks and aims to be a short guide to on- chip networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

BLADE: An in-Cache Computing Architecture for Edge Devices

TL;DR: Experimental results demonstrate performance/energy gains over an equivalent NEON accelerated processor for a variety of edge device workloads, namely, cryptography (4x performance gain/6x energy reduction), video encoding, and convolutional neural networks (3x/1.5x).
References
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Journal Article

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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