2014
DOI: 10.1109/tvlsi.2012.2236689
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Way Stealing: A Unified Data Cache and Architecturally Visible Storage for Instruction Set Extensions

Abstract: Abstract-Way Stealing is a simple architectural modification to a cache-based processor that increases the data bandwidth to and from application-specific instruction set extensions (ISEs), which increase performance and reduce energy consumption. Way Stealing offers higher bandwidth than interfacing the ISEs the processor's register file, and eliminates the need to allocate separate memories called Architecturally Visible Storage (AVS) that are dedicated to the ISEs, and to ensure coherence between the AVS me… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, companies such as ARM [184] and Synopsys [158] provide hardware IPs [185] [186] for easy integration while providing better performance and power efficiency. In a recent work Kluter et al [187] proposed to integrate the local memory for custom instructions into the data cache in order to obviate the need of cache-coherence protocols. Moreover, they placed an additional constraint on the local memory blocks to be single-ported so as to successfully "merge" it with the data cache.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, companies such as ARM [184] and Synopsys [158] provide hardware IPs [185] [186] for easy integration while providing better performance and power efficiency. In a recent work Kluter et al [187] proposed to integrate the local memory for custom instructions into the data cache in order to obviate the need of cache-coherence protocols. Moreover, they placed an additional constraint on the local memory blocks to be single-ported so as to successfully "merge" it with the data cache.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, they placed an additional constraint on the local memory blocks to be single-ported so as to successfully "merge" it with the data cache. Unlike their previous work using DMA, in [187] they used prefetch instructions to transfer data between the main memory and one of the ways of the data cache where the local memory for custom instructions reside. Although they avoided using DMA for data transfer, their communication cost is still nonzero [187].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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