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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Improving direct-mapped cache performance by the addition of a small fully-associative cache and prefetch buffers

Norman P. Jouppi
- Vol. 18, pp 364-373
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TLDR
In this article, a hardware technique to improve the performance of caches is presented, where a small fully-associative cache between a cache and its refill path is used to place prefetched data and not in the cache.
Abstract
Projections of computer technology forecast processors with peak performance of 1,000 MIPS in the relatively near future. These processors could easily lose half or more of their performance in the memory hierarchy if the hierarchy design is based on conventional caching techniques. This paper presents hardware techniques to improve the performance of caches.Miss caching places a small fully-associative cache between a cache and its refill path. Misses in the cache that hit in the miss cache have only a one cycle miss penalty, as opposed to a many cycle miss penalty without the miss cache. Small miss caches of 2 to 5 entries are shown to be very effective in removing mapping conflict misses in first-level direct-mapped caches.Victim caching is an improvement to miss caching that loads the small fully-associative cache with the victim of a miss and not the requested line. Small victim caches of 1 to 5 entries are even more effective at removing conflict misses than miss caching.Stream buffers prefetch cache lines starting at a cache miss address. The prefetched data is placed in the buffer and not in the cache. Stream buffers are useful in removing capacity and compulsory cache misses, as well as some instruction cache conflict misses. Stream buffers are more effective than previously investigated prefetch techniques at using the next slower level in the memory hierarchy when it is pipelined. An extension to the basic stream buffer, called multi-way stream buffers, is introduced. Multi-way stream buffers are useful for prefetching along multiple intertwined data reference streams.Together, victim caches and stream buffers reduce the miss rate of the first level in the cache hierarchy by a factor of two to three on a set of six large benchmarks.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Runahead execution vs. conventional data prefetching in the IBM POWER6 microprocessor

TL;DR: It is found that the POWER6 implementation of runahead prefetching is quite effective on many of the memory intensive applications studied; in isolation it improves performance as much as 36% and on average 10%.
Patent

Method, system, and apparatus to improve instruction pre-fetching on computer systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a pre-fetched instruction pre-fetching algorithm that prefetches the cache line corresponding to a particular instruction address, and an augmentation to a computer-based branch instruction that can specify whether sequential instruction pre fetching should be initiated at the target of a branch instruction.
Proceedings Article

WayPoint: Scaling coherence to 1000-core architectures

TL;DR: To achieve thousand-core scalability with smaller and less associative sparse directories, WayPoint is introduced, a mechanism that increases directory associativity and capacity dynamically and achieves performance within 4% of an infinitely large on-die directory.
Book ChapterDOI

Reducing Memory Traffic Via Redundant Store Instructions

TL;DR: This paper shows that with no additional hardware (just a simple comparator) and without increasing the cache lalency, one can achieve on average a 10% of memory traffic reduction.

Pointer-Based Prefetching within the Impulse Adaptable Memory Controller: Initial Results

TL;DR: This paper presents results for an initial implementation of pointer-based prefetching within the Impulse adaptable memory controller, and finds that a superscalar, outof-order processor hides the memory latency of linked data structures accessed in large loop iterations exceptionally well, which makes any pointerPrefetching unnecessary.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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