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High-level System Modeling and Power Management Techniques

High-level System Modeling and Power Management Techniques. Jinfeng Liu Dept. of ECE, UC Irvine Sep. 2000. Background . X2000 Avionics System Architecture COTS – based building blocks for system integration Low cost component with strong commercial support

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High-level System Modeling and Power Management Techniques

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  1. High-level System Modeling and Power Management Techniques Jinfeng Liu Dept. of ECE, UC Irvine Sep. 2000

  2. Background • X2000 Avionics System Architecture • COTS – based building blocks for system integration • Low cost component with strong commercial support • Widely accepted specification, design, application and testing • Reduced development cost • Dual system bus architecture • IEEE 1394 bus • Hi performance on fast data rate • Moderate power • Reconfigurable structure • I2C bus • Low power • Adequate data rate for low-speed communication

  3. Examples • X2000 Power Requirement • Computing performance • 10 – 20 times increase • Power consumption • 10 times decrease in digital electronics • 2 times decrease in analog electronics • Mars Rover Power management • Mission requirement • Image and scientific experiment • Power supply • Non-rechargeable battery and solar panel • Power management solution • Serialize all operations to avoid exceeding power supply margin

  4. What is PACC? • Low power design – as low as possible • Minimize power consumption at circuit/gate level • No system-level and application specific knowledge • Limited reconfiguration space to meet multiple mission requirement • Power aware computation – use power wisely • Power model built on application-specific knowledge • Reconfigurable system architecture to meet multiple mission requirement • Adaptive adjustment to run-time power supply • Optimize power usage on system level • Use power efficiently to complete computation • Regulate power surge to protect battery • Shorten execution time to save energy

  5. Our Approach • High-level system modeling techniques • Describe the system in high-level abstractions • Employ application specific knowledge in system models • Apply power aware management methodologies in different levels • System models • Behavioral modeling – software architecture, application specific knowledge • Architectural modeling – hardware platform • Partitioning – mapping behavioral objects to architectural structures • Scheduling – a valid sequence of concurrent/parallel operations on multiple processors that satisfies real-time requirement

  6. Our Approach • Power management and optimization • Behavioral modeling – extract power related attributes of all objects • Architecture modeling – use low-power devices or devices that can operate on low-power mode • Partitioning – merge computations on under-utilized processors on one processor to improve utilization • Partitioning – separate tightly coupled computations into clusters to localize communication • Scheduling – arrange operation sequence to satisfy power apply limitation and regulate power consumption within a stable range

  7. Behavioral Model • Application specific knowledge • Input, output and function • Dependency and precedence • Control and data flow • Timing and sequence • Software architecture • Operating system features – real-time, centralized, distributed, and etc. • Execution model – event driven, interrupt, distributed agent, client-server, and etc. • Communication model – protocol stack and specification • Power related attributes • Data rate, execution time, CPU speed, memory size, communication path, and etc.

  8. Architectural Model • Component – available COTS • Type – processor, memory, I/O, DSP, bus, and etc. • Interface – how the components can be connected to each other • Modes – operation modes parameters, voltage, clock speed, bandwidth, power consumption, and etc. • Package – a bundle of connected components that performs certain operation • Components – a set of connected components • Internal/external interface – how components are connected • Modes – configuration space of the collected components specified by each component’s working mode and collective attributes, e.g., voltage, speed, power and etc.

  9. Partitioning • Mapping – map behavioral objects to hardware • Group related OS, communication, control and application objects into processing nodes • Extract data objects into storage nodes • Allocate components/packages for each processing node • Arrange data storage for data nodes and optimize storage location to reduce communication • Establish communication paths among nodes that comply with the communication model • Setup working mode of each component/package to fit the behavioral requirement • Extract attribute of each structure • Function – computation, control, communication • CPU utilization • Bus traffic • Power consumption

  10. Partitioning • Migration – combine multiple nodes to one node to improve utilization • Examine the utilization of each processor • Migrate computation on under-utilized processors and merge corresponding storage if necessary • Balance power consumption and CPU utilization • Segmentation – arrange nodes in tight communication in a bus segmentation • Group nodes by communication localities • Settle each group in a bus segment (a feature of IEEE 1394) • Extract attributes of localized communication mode in a segmented bus • Improved performance • Reduced bus traffic • Reduced power consumption

  11. Scheduling • Scheduling techniques • Deadline based real-time scheduling on multiprocessors • Rate-monotonic scheduling – extend existing RM scheduling to multiprocessors • Timing constraint graph scheduling – multiple serializable sequences in single heart beat • Constraint logic solving • Transfer all constraints into a pure mathematical form • Use tools to solve the problem in mathematical domain • Power constraint scheduling • Schedule events to meet power requirement • Regulate power surge • Use power efficiently to reduce execution time • Use graphic tool to visualize power consumption

  12. Scheduling • Our scheduling tool • A novel graphical tool that visualize timing and power constraint and transforms them into simple graph problems • Event – bins • Timing – horizontal size • Power – vertical size • Energy – area of the bin • Power surge – compacting bins downward • Timing constraints – bin packing problem to satisfy horizontal constraints • Power constraints – bin packing problem to satisfy vertical constraints • Powerful management and optimization tool to give designers a vision to the power surge on run-time

  13. Power Processor 2 Task D follows B D D D Periodic task C C C C C C B B B B Periodic task B Power level Energy consumption Constant task A A Processor 1 Starting time Time Ending time Extended Gantt chart to describe parallel operations on multiprocessors with power consumption attributes Power Scheduling Graph

  14. Min timing constraint of D D Max timing constraint of D Power C C Scheduling space of D B B A Deadline of B (scheduling space) Time Deadline of B Deadline of C (scheduling space) Deadline of C Timing constraints defined by deadline, min and max timing constraint limit the horizontal position of each bin Timing Constraint

  15. Power D D D C C C C C B B B B A Time Power Max power C C C D B B B B C D C D C C D C Max power A Time Compacting bin downward makes the curve of power surge Power Constraint

  16. Slide bin within timing space to meet power constraint Squeeze/extend bin to available time slot to meet power constraint. This may require changing clock speed of the processor, and power consumption should be also changed. D Max timing constraint of D Power D C C C C B B Min timing constraint of D A Deadline of B Time Deadline of B Deadline of C Deadline of C Scheduling becomes a bin-packing problem Scheduling

  17. Power C C C Max power D B B B B C D C D C C D C Min power A Power constraint graph Time Power D D D C C C C C B B B B A Time Timing constraint graph Designers can slide the bins on timing constraint graph while monitoring power surge on power constraint graph How it works

  18. Examples • Mars Rover Power Management – walking mode • System specifications • Six driving motors for wheels • Four steering motors • Heaters for each motor • System health check • Hazard detection • Timing constraints • Power constraints • Solutions • Serialize each operation to satisfy power constraint • Too conservative usage of power • No scheduling tool is used

  19. Scheduling Results • To be continued • Under construction

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