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Neugebauer/2018a: Efficient Implementation of Resource-Constrained Cyber-Physical Systems Using Multi-Core Parallelism

Bibtype Phdthesis
Bibkey Neugebauer/2018a
Author Neugebauer, Olaf
Title Efficient Implementation of Resource-Constrained Cyber-Physical Systems Using Multi-Core Parallelism
School TU Dortmund
Address Dortmund, Germany
Publisher Department of Computer Science
Abstract The quest for more performance of applications and systems became more challenging in the recent years. Especially in the cyber-physical and mobile domain, the performance requirements increased significantly. Applications, previously found in the high-performance domain, emerge in the area of resource-constrained domain. Modern heterogeneous high-performance MPSoCs provide a solid foundation to satisfy the high demand. Such systems combine general processors with specialized accelerators ranging from GPUs to machine learning chips. On the other side of the performance spectrum, the demand for small energy efficient systems exposed by modern IoT applications increased vastly. Developing efficient software for such resource-constrained multi-core systems is an error-prone, time-consuming and challenging task. This thesis provides with PA4RES a holistic semiautomatic approach to parallelize and implement applications for such platforms efficiently. Our solution supports the developer to find good trade-offs to tackle the requirements exposed by modern applications and systems. With PICO, we propose a comprehensive approach to express parallelism in sequential applications. PICO detects data dependencies and implements required synchronization automatically. Using a genetic algorithm, PICO optimizes the data synchronization. The evolutionary algorithm considers channel capacity, memory mapping, channel merging and flexibility offered by the channel implementation with respect to execution time, energy consumption and memory footprint. PICO's communication optimization phase was able to generate a speedup almost 2 or an energy improvement of 30{%} for certain benchmarks.The PAMONO sensor approach enables a fast detection of biological viruses using optical methods. With a sophisticated virus detection software, a real-time virus detection running on stationary computers was achieved.Within this thesis, we were able to derive a soft real-time capable virus detection running on a high-performance embedded system, commonly found in today's smart phones. This was accomplished with smart DSE algorithm which optimizes for execution time, energy consumption and detection quality. Compared to a baseline implementation, our solution achieved a speedup of 4.1 and 87% energy savings and satisfied the soft real-time requirements. Accepting a degradation of the detection quality, which still is usable in medical context, led to a speedup of 11.1. This work provides the fundamentals for a truly mobile real-time virus detection solution. The growing demand for processing power can no longer satisfied following well-known approaches like higher frequencies. These so-called performance walls expose a serious challenge for the growing performance demand. Approximate computing is a promising approach to overcome or at least shift the performance walls by accepting a degradation in the output quality to gain improvements in other objectives. Especially for a safe integration of approximation into existing application or during the development of new approximation techniques, a method to assess the impact on the output quality is essential.With QCAPES, we provide a multi-metric assessment framework to analyze the impact of approximation.Furthermore, QCAPES provides useful insights on the impact of approximation on execution time and energy consumption. With ApproxPICO we propose an extension to PICO to consider approximate computing during the parallelization of sequential applications.
Year 2018
Projekt SFB876-A3, SFB876-B2
Url http://doi.org/10.17877/DE290R-18927
 
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