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KAPow
Author(s) -
James J. Davis,
Eddie Hung,
Joshua M. Levine,
Edward Stott,
Peter Y. K. Cheung,
George A. Constantinides
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acm transactions on reconfigurable technology and systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.355
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 1936-7414
pISSN - 1936-7406
DOI - 10.1145/3129789
Subject(s) - computer science , field programmable gate array , power (physics) , identification (biology) , embedded system , design flow , real time computing , power consumption , range (aeronautics) , dynamic demand , computer engineering , botany , physics , materials science , quantum mechanics , composite material , biology
In an FPGA system-on-chip design, it is often insufficient to merely assess the power consumption of the entire circuit by compile-time estimation or runtime power measurement. Instead, to make better decisions, one must understand the power consumed by each module in the system. In this work, we combine measurements of register-level switching activity and system-level power to build an adaptive online model that produces live breakdowns of power consumption within the design. Online model refinement avoids time-consuming characterization while also allowing the model to track long-term operating condition changes. Central to our method is an automated flow that selects signals predicted to be indicative of high power consumption, instrumenting them for monitoring. We named this technique KAPow, for ‘K’ounting Activity for Power estimation, which we show to be accurate and to have low overheads across a range of representative benchmarks. We also propose a strategy allowing for the identification and subsequent elimination of counters found to be of low significance at runtime, reducing algorithmic complexity without sacrificing significant accuracy. Finally, we demonstrate an application example in which a module-level power breakdown can be used to determine an efficient mapping of tasks to modules and reduce system-wide power consumption by up to 7%.

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