International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN'06)
In-Register Duplication: Exploiting Narrow-Width Value for Improving Register File Reliability
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
June 25-June 28
ISBN: 0-7695-2607-1
Protecting the register value and its data buses is crucial to reliable computing in high-performance microprocessors due to the increasing susceptibility of CMOS circuitry to soft errors induced by high-energy particle strikes. Since the register file is in the critical path of the processor pipeline, any reliable design that increases either the pressure on the register file or the register file access latency is not desirable. In this paper, we propose to exploit narrow-width register values, which present the majority of the generated values, for duplicating a copy of the value within the same data item, called in-register duplication (IRD), eliminating the requirement of additional copy registers. The datapath pipeline is augmented to efficiently incorporate parity encoding and parity checking such that error recovery is seamlessly supported in IRD and the parity checking is overlapped with the execution stage to avoid increasing the critical path. Our experimental evaluation using the SPEC CINT2000 benchmark suite shows that IRD provides superior read-with-duplicate (RWD) and error detection/ recovery rates under heavy error injection as compared to previous reliability schemes.
Citation:
Jie Hu, Shuai Wang, Sotirios G. Ziavras, "In-Register Duplication: Exploiting Narrow-Width Value for Improving Register File Reliability," dsn, pp.281-290, International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks (DSN'06), 2006