Abstract

On-chip caches represent a sizable fraction of the total power consumption of microprocessors. Although large caches can significantly improve performance, they have the potential to increase power consumption. As feature sizes shrink, the dominant component of this power loss will be leakage. However, during a fixed period of time the activity in a cache is only centered on a small subset of the lines. This behavior can be exploited to cut the leakage power of large caches by putting the cold cache lines into a state preserving, low-power drowsy mode. Moving lines into and out of drowsy state incurs a slight performance loss. In this paper we investigate policies and circuit techniques for implementing drowsy…

Citation impact

742
total citations
FWCI
27.95
Percentile
100%
References
12
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cache
  • Computer science
  • Power consumption
  • Embedded system
  • Leakage (economics)
  • CPU cache
  • Power (physics)
  • Chip
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Affordable and clean energy
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