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    XMT-M: A Scalable Decentralized Processor

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    Date
    1999-10-09
    Author
    Berkovich, Efraim
    Nuzman, Joseph
    Franklin, Manoj
    Jacob, Bruce
    Vishkin, Uzi
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    Abstract
    A defining challenge for research in computer science and engineering has been the ongoing quest for reducing the completion time of a single computation task. Even outside the parallel processing communities, there is little doubt that the key to further progress in this quest is to do parallel processing of some kind. A recently proposed parallel processing framework that spans the entire spectrum from (parallel) algorithms to architecture to implementation is the explicit multi-threading (XMT) framework. This framework provides: (i) simple and natural parallel algorithms for essentially every general-purpose application, including notoriously difficult irregular integer applications, and (ii) a multi-threaded programming model for these algorithms which allows an ``independence-of-order'' semantics: every thread can proceed at its own speed, independent of other concurrent threads. To the extent possible, the XMT framework uses established ideas in parallel processing. This paper presents XMT-M, a microarchitecture implementation of the XMT model that is possible with current technology. XMT-M offers an engineering design point that addresses four concerns: buildability, programmability, performance, and scalability. The XMT-M hardware is geared to execute multiple threads in parallel on a single chip: relying on very few new gadgets, it can execute parallel threads without busy-waits! Existing code can be run on XMT-M as a single thread without any modifications, thereby providing backward compatibility for commercial acceptance. Simulation-based studies of XMT-M demonstrate considerable improvements in performance relative to the best serial processor even for small, and therefore practical, input sizes. (Also cross-referenced as UMIACS-TR-99-55)
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    http://hdl.handle.net/1903/1030
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    • Technical Reports of the Computer Science Department

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