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Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Computer Architecture and Systems Lab
1. Journal Articles
Exploiting OS-level Memory Offlining for DRAM Power Management
Lee, Seung. Hak.
;
Kim, N.S.
;
Kim, Daehoon
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Computer Architecture and Systems Lab
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Title
Exploiting OS-level Memory Offlining for DRAM Power Management
Issued Date
2019-07
Citation
Lee, Seung. Hak. (2019-07). Exploiting OS-level Memory Offlining for DRAM Power Management. IEEE Computer Architecture Letters, 18(2), 141–144. doi: 10.1109/LCA.2019.2942914
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Random access memory
;
Memory management
;
Energy consumption
;
Hardware
;
Software
;
Linux
;
DRAM
;
memory offlining
;
power management
Keywords
Computer hardware
;
Computer operating systems
;
Computer software
;
Energy utilization
;
Linux
;
Power management
;
and Daehoon Kim
;
Memory management
;
Nam Sung Kim
;
Random access memory
;
Seunghak Lee
;
Dynamic random access storage
ISSN
1556-6056
Abstract
Power and energy consumed by main memory systems in data-center servers have increased as the DRAM capacity and bandwidth increase. Particularly, background power accounts for a considerable fraction of the total DRAM power consumption; the fraction will increase further in the near future, especially when slowing-down technology scaling forces us to provide necessary DRAM capacity through plugging in more DRAM modules or stacking more DRAM chips in a DRAM package. Although current DRAM architecture supports low power states at rank granularity that turn off some components during idle periods, techniques to exploit memory-level parallelism make the rank-granularity power state become ineffective. Furthermore, the long wake-up latency is one of obstacles to adopting aggressive power management (PM) with deep power-down states. By tackling the limitations, we propose OffDIMM that is a software-assisted DRAM PM collaborating with the OS-level memory onlining/offlining. OffDIMM maps a memory block in the address space of the OS to a subarray group or groups of DRAM, and sets a deep power-down state for the subarray group when offlining the block. Through the dynamic OS-level memory onlining/offlining based on the current memory usage, our experimental results show OffDIMM reduces background power by 24 percent on average without notable performance overheads. © 2002-2011 IEEE.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/10987
DOI
10.1109/LCA.2019.2942914
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
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