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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
1 2 Per Stenstro ..m and David Whalley 1 Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden 2 Florida State University, U.S.A. In January2007,the secondedition in the series of International Conferenceson High-Performance Embedded Architectures andCompilers (HiPEAC'2007)was held in Ghent,Belgium.We were fortunate to attract around70 submissions of whichonly19wereselected forpresentation.Amongthese,weaskedtheauthors ofthe?vemost highly rated contributionsto make extended versions ofthem. They all accepted to do that andtheirarticles appear in this section ofthe second volume. The?rstarticlebyKeramidas,Xekalakis,andKaxirasfocusesontheincreased power consumption in set-associativecaches.They presenta novel approach to reduce dynamicpower that leverages on the previously proposed cache decay approach that has been shown to reduce static (or leakage) power. In the secondarticlebyMagarajan,Gupta,andKrishnaswamythe focus ison techniques to encrypt data in memory to preservedata integrity. The problem with previous techniques is that the decryption latency ends up on the critical memory access path. Especially in embedded processors,caches are small and it isdi?cultto hide the decryption latency. The authors propose a compiler-based strategy that manages to reduce the impact of the decryption time signi?cantly. The thirdarticlebyKluyskensandEeckhoutfocusesondetailedarchitectural simulation techniques.It is well-known that they are ine?cientandaremedy to the problem isto use sampling.When usingsampling,onehastowarm up memory structures such as caches andbranch predictors.Thispaper introduces a noveltechnique calledBranchHistoryMatchingfore?cient warmupofbranch predictors. The fourth articlebyBhadauria,McKee,Singh, and Tyson focuses on static power consumptioninlarge caches.Theyintroduce a reuse-distance drowsy cache mechanism that issimpleas well as e?ective in reducingthestaticpower in caches.
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
1 2 Per Stenstro ..m and David Whalley 1 Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden 2 Florida State University, U.S.A. In January2007,the secondedition in the series of International Conferenceson High-Performance Embedded Architectures andCompilers (HiPEAC'2007)was held in Ghent,Belgium.We were fortunate to attract around70 submissions of whichonly19wereselected forpresentation.Amongthese,weaskedtheauthors ofthe?vemost highly rated contributionsto make extended versions ofthem. They all accepted to do that andtheirarticles appear in this section ofthe second volume. The?rstarticlebyKeramidas,Xekalakis,andKaxirasfocusesontheincreased power consumption in set-associativecaches.They presenta novel approach to reduce dynamicpower that leverages on the previously proposed cache decay approach that has been shown to reduce static (or leakage) power. In the secondarticlebyMagarajan,Gupta,andKrishnaswamythe focus ison techniques to encrypt data in memory to preservedata integrity. The problem with previous techniques is that the decryption latency ends up on the critical memory access path. Especially in embedded processors,caches are small and it isdi?cultto hide the decryption latency. The authors propose a compiler-based strategy that manages to reduce the impact of the decryption time signi?cantly. The thirdarticlebyKluyskensandEeckhoutfocusesondetailedarchitectural simulation techniques.It is well-known that they are ine?cientandaremedy to the problem isto use sampling.When usingsampling,onehastowarm up memory structures such as caches andbranch predictors.Thispaper introduces a noveltechnique calledBranchHistoryMatchingfore?cient warmupofbranch predictors. The fourth articlebyBhadauria,McKee,Singh, and Tyson focuses on static power consumptioninlarge caches.Theyintroduce a reuse-distance drowsy cache mechanism that issimpleas well as e?ective in reducingthestaticpower in caches.