As scaling of conventional memory devices has stalled, many high end and next generation computing systems have begun to incorporate alternative memory technologies to meet performance goals. Since these technologies present distinct advantages and tradeoffs compared to conventional DDR* SDRAM, such as higher bandwidth with lower capacity or vice versa, they are typically packaged alongside conventional SDRAM in a heterogeneous memory architecture. To utilize the different types of memory efficiently, new data management strategies are needed to match application usage to the best available memory technology. However, current proposals for managing heterogeneous memories are limited because they either: 1) do not consider high-level application behavior when assigning data to different types of memory, or 2) require separate program execution (with a representative input) to collect information about how the application uses memory resources.This work presents a new data management toolset to address the limitations of existing approaches for managing complex memories. It extends the application runtime layer with automated monitoring and management routines that assign application data to the best tier of memory based on previous usage, without any need for source code modification or a separate profiling run. It evaluates this approach on a state-of-theart server platform with both conventional DDR4 SDRAM and non-volatile Intel ® Optane TM DC memory, using both memory-intensive high performance computing (HPC) applications as well as standard benchmarks. Overall, the results show that this approach improves program performance significantly compared to a standard unguided approach across a variety of workloads and system configurations. The HPC applications exhibit the largest benefits, with speedups ranging from 1.4𝑥 to 7𝑥 in the best cases. Additionally, we show that this approach achieves similar performance as a comparable offline profiling-based approach after a short startup period, without requiring separate program execution or offline analysis steps.CCS Concepts: • Software and its engineering → Runtime environments; • Computer systems organization → Heterogeneous (hybrid) systems.
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