TY - GEN
T1 - Slack redistribution for graceful degradation under voltage overscaling
AU - Kahng, Andrew B.
AU - Kang, Seokhyeong
AU - Kumar, Rakesh
AU - Sartori, John
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2010 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Modern digital IC designs have a critical operating point, or "wall of slack", that limits voltage scaling. Even with an error-tolerance mechanism, scaling voltage below a critical voltage - so-called overscaling - results in more timing errors than can be effectively detected or corrected. This limits the effectiveness of voltage scaling in trading off system reliability and power. We propose a designlevel approach to trading off reliability and voltage (power) in, e.g., microprocessor designs. We increase the range of voltage values at which the (timing) error rate is acceptable; we achieve this through techniques for power-aware slack redistribution that shift the timing slack of frequently-exercised, near-critical timing paths in a power- and area-efficient manner. The resulting designs heuristically minimize the voltage at which the maximum allowable error rate is encountered, thus minimizing power consumption for a prescribed maximum error rate and allowing the design to fail more gracefully. Compared with baseline designs, we achieve a maximum of 32.8% and an average of 12.5% power reduction at an error rate of 2%. The area overhead of our techniques, as evaluated through physical implementation (synthesis, placement and routing), is no more than 2.7%.
AB - Modern digital IC designs have a critical operating point, or "wall of slack", that limits voltage scaling. Even with an error-tolerance mechanism, scaling voltage below a critical voltage - so-called overscaling - results in more timing errors than can be effectively detected or corrected. This limits the effectiveness of voltage scaling in trading off system reliability and power. We propose a designlevel approach to trading off reliability and voltage (power) in, e.g., microprocessor designs. We increase the range of voltage values at which the (timing) error rate is acceptable; we achieve this through techniques for power-aware slack redistribution that shift the timing slack of frequently-exercised, near-critical timing paths in a power- and area-efficient manner. The resulting designs heuristically minimize the voltage at which the maximum allowable error rate is encountered, thus minimizing power consumption for a prescribed maximum error rate and allowing the design to fail more gracefully. Compared with baseline designs, we achieve a maximum of 32.8% and an average of 12.5% power reduction at an error rate of 2%. The area overhead of our techniques, as evaluated through physical implementation (synthesis, placement and routing), is no more than 2.7%.
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U2 - 10.1109/ASPDAC.2010.5419690
DO - 10.1109/ASPDAC.2010.5419690
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:77951223419
SN - 9781424457656
T3 - Proceedings of the Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference, ASP-DAC
SP - 825
EP - 831
BT - 2010 15th Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference, ASP-DAC 2010
T2 - 2010 15th Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference, ASP-DAC 2010
Y2 - 18 January 2010 through 21 January 2010
ER -