Tarantula is an aggressive floating point machine targeted at technical, scientific and bioinformatics workloads, originally planned as a follow-on candidate to the EV8 processor [6,5]. Tarantula adds to the EV8 core a vector unit capable of 32 double-precision flops per cycle. The vector unit fetches data directly from a 16 MByte second level cache with a peak bandwidth of sixty four 64-bit values per cycle. The whole chip is backed by a memory controller capable of delivering over 64 GBytes/s of raw bandwidth. Tarantula extends the Alpha ISA with new vector instructions that operate on new architectural state. Salient features of the architecture and implementation are: (1) it fully integrates into a virtual-memory cache-coherent system without changes to its coherency protocol, (2) provides high bandwidth for non-unit stride memory accesses, (3) supports gather/scatter instructions efficiently, (4) fully integrates with the EV8 core with a narrow, streamlined interface, rather than acting as a co-processor, (5) can achieve a peak of 104 operations per cycle, and (6) achieves excellent "real-computation" per transistor and per watt ratios. Our detailed simulations show that Tarantula achieves an average speedup of 5X over EV8, out of a peak speedup in terms of flops of 8X. Furthermore, performance on gather/scatter intensive benchmarks such as Radix Sort is also remarkable: a speedup of almost 3X over EV8 and 15 sustained operations per cycle. Several benchmarks exceed 20 operations per cycle.
Tarantula is an aggressive floating point machine targeted at technical scientific and bioinformatics workloads, originally planned as a follow-on candidate to the EV8 processor [6,5]. Tarantula adds to the EV8 core a vector unit capable of 32 double-precision flops per cycle. The vector unit fetches data directly from a 16 MByte second level cache with a peak bandwidth of sixty four 64-bit values per cycle. The whole chip is backed by a memory controller capable of delivering over 64 GBytes/s of raw bandwidth. Tarantula extends the Alpha 1SA with new vector instructions that operate on new architectural state. Salient features of the architecture and implementation are: (1) it fully integrates into a virtual-memory cache-coherent system without changes to its coherency protocol (2) provides high bandwidth for non-unit stride memory accesses, (3) supports gather/scatter instructions e3ficiently, (4)fully integrates with the EV8 core with a narrow, streamlined interface, rather than acting as a co-processor, (5) can achieve a peak of 104 operations per cycle, and (6) achieves excellent "real-computation "per transistor and per watt ratios. Our detailed simulations show that Tarantula achieves an average speedup of 5X over EV8, out of a peak speedup in terms of flops of SX. Furthermore, performance on gather/scatter intensive benchmarks such as Radix Sort is also remarkable: a speedup of almost 3X over EV8 and 15 sustained operations per cycle. Several benchmarks exceed 20 operations per cycle.
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