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Multicore Resource Management: by Rakshitha.K.R and Menaka.S.H

This document summarizes a paper written by Rakshitha K.R. and Menaka S.H., 4th semester students in the EC branch of JNNCE in Shimoga. The paper discusses how many core architectures will be the dominant trend in computing and how traditional resource allocation methods for off-chip multiprocessors will be inadequate. It proposes that a hardware/software interface based on virtual private machines would allow software policies to explicitly manage microarchitecture resources in future multicore systems, as current resource management mechanisms and policies will be insufficient.

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Praveen D Jadhav
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views2 pages

Multicore Resource Management: by Rakshitha.K.R and Menaka.S.H

This document summarizes a paper written by Rakshitha K.R. and Menaka S.H., 4th semester students in the EC branch of JNNCE in Shimoga. The paper discusses how many core architectures will be the dominant trend in computing and how traditional resource allocation methods for off-chip multiprocessors will be inadequate. It proposes that a hardware/software interface based on virtual private machines would allow software policies to explicitly manage microarchitecture resources in future multicore systems, as current resource management mechanisms and policies will be insufficient.

Uploaded by

Praveen D Jadhav
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MULTICORE RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

BY RAKSHITHA.K.R AND MENAKA.S.H


4TH SEM EC BRANCH,
JNNCE,
SHIMOGA.

Abstract

Many core architectures are expected to be the dominant


trend in future general-purpose computing systems. With the
number of on-chip processor cores rising to the Hundreds,
the problem of resource allocation cannot be addressed with
traditional methods employed by off-chip multiprocessor
architectures.
Current resource management Mechanisms and Polices are
inadequate for future Multicore systems. Instead, a
hardware/software interface based on THE VIRTUAL
PRIVATE MACHINE abstraction would allow software
policies to explicitly manage Microarchitecture resources.
VPM policies, implemented primarily in software, translates
application and system objectives into VPM resource
assignments. Then, VPM mechanisms securely multiplex,
arbitrate, or distribute hardware resources to satisfy the
VPM assignments.

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