Projects: Summary of Projects by RegionProjects in Region Scotland involving University of Edinburgh : EP/V028154/1 |
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Reference Number | EP/V028154/1 | |
Title | C6: Correct-by-Construction Heterogeneous Coherence | |
Status | Started | |
Energy Categories | Energy Efficiency(Other) 5%; Not Energy Related 95%; |
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Research Types | Basic and strategic applied research 100% | |
Science and Technology Fields | PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Computer Science and Informatics) 35%; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) 65%; |
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UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation | Not Cross-cutting 100% | |
Principal Investigator |
Dr A Barbalace Sch of Informatics University of Edinburgh |
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Award Type | Standard | |
Funding Source | EPSRC | |
Start Date | 15 November 2021 | |
End Date | 14 November 2025 | |
Duration | 48 months | |
Total Grant Value | £494,698 | |
Industrial Sectors | Electronics | |
Region | Scotland | |
Programme | NC : ICT | |
Investigators | Principal Investigator | Dr A Barbalace , Sch of Informatics, University of Edinburgh (99.999%) |
Other Investigator | Dr TC Grosser , Sch of Informatics, University of Edinburgh (0.001%) |
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Industrial Collaborator | Project Contact , University of St Andrews (0.000%) Project Contact , Huawei Technologies (UK) Co. Ltd (0.000%) Project Contact , Duke University (0.000%) |
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Web Site | ||
Objectives | ||
Abstract | About 55 years ago, Gordon Moore speculated that transistors will become smaller and more energy efficient every year. Since then, we have enjoyed exponentially increasing computer performance owing to what has been called the Moore's law.However, Moore's law is coming to an end and has already begun to disrupt the semiconductor industry. Absent the exponential performance and energy gains due to device scaling, industry has pivoted to hardware specialisation: targeting hardware to a specific computation class generally leads to orders of magnitude improvement in energy and performance.We are well and truly in the age of heterogeneous computing. A modern smartphone today has dozens of devices within a single chip, including CPUs, GPUs, and other accelerators. But efficiency hinges on reducing data movement between these devices; otherwise, it can seriously jeopardise the benefits of heterogeneous computing. Sadly, an analysis of Google workloads on a mobile device reveals that, on average, more than 60% of the overall energy is spent on moving around data.One promising approach to reducing data movement is called cache coherence. The cache coherence protocol, which automatically replicates data consistently, enables data to be accessed locally when it is safe to do so. Thus, it not only minimises data movement but it also does so in a programmer-transparent fashion.However, cache coherence protocols are notoriously hard to design and verify even for homogeneous multicores, where they have been deployed today. To make matters worse, we do not know how to keep the devices of a heterogeneous computer coherent correctly, in part because we do not yet understand what it means to be correct.In this project, we propose an entirely new way of designing coherence protocols. Instead of manually designing them and verifying them later, we propose an automatic method to generate them correctly. Our method is based on a new foundation of heterogeneous coherence called compound consistency models, which formally answers the question of how distinct coherence protocols should compose. If successful, the project will not only lift the major roadblock to efficient heterogeneous computing (data movements costs), it will also catalyse the burgeoning open hardware movement by democratising one of its trickiest components: cache coherence protocols | |
Data | No related datasets |
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Projects | No related projects |
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Publications | No related publications |
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Added to Database | 11/01/22 |