Difference between revisions of "Projects"

From ArcoWiki
 
(30 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
====  ====
+
= CoCoUnit: An Energy-Efficient Processing Unit for Cognitive Computing (2019-2025) =
 +
There is a fast-growing interest in extending the capabilities of computing systems to perform human-like tasks in an intelligent way. These technologies are usually referred to as cognitive computing. We envision a next revolution in computing in the forthcoming years that will be driven by deploying many “intelligent” devices around us in all kind of environments (work, entertainment, transportation, health care, etc.) backed up by “intelligent” servers in the cloud. These cognitive computing systems will provide new user experiences by delivering new services or improving the operational efficiency of existing ones, and altogether will enrich our lives and our economy.
  
== <span style="display: none;" id="1218576781403S">&nbsp;</span>Adaptive Multithreaded Architectures ==
+
A key characteristic of cognitive computing systems will be their capability to process in real time large amounts of data coming from audio and vision devices, and other type of sensors. This will demand a very high computing power but at the same time an extremely low energy consumption. This very challenging energy-efficiency requirement is a sine qua non to success not only for mobile and wearable systems, where power dissipation and cost budgets are very low, but also for large data centers where energy consumption is a main component of the total cost of ownership.
  
== Clustered Microarchitectures ==
+
Current processor architectures (including general-purpose cores and GPUs) are not a good fit for this type of systems since they keep the same basic organization as early computers, which were mainly optimized for “number crunching”. CoCoUnit will take a disruptive direction by investigating unconventional architectures that can offer orders of magnitude better efficiency in terms of performance per energy and cost for cognitive computing tasks. The ultimate goal of this project is to devise a novel processing unit that will be integrated with the existing units of a processor (general purpose cores and GPUs) and altogether will be able to deliver cognitive computing user experiences with extremely high energy-efficiency.
  
== Co-designed Virtual Machines ==
+
This project is funded by the European Research Council through the ERC Advanced Grants program.
  
== Energy Reduction and Temperature Control ==
+
<br>
 +
= Intelligent, Ubiquitous and Energy-Efficient Computing Systems (2016-2020) =
 +
The ultimate goal of this project is to devise novel platforms that provide rich user experiences in the areas of cognitive computing and computational intelligence in mobile devices such as smartphones or wearable devices. This project investigates novel unconventional architectures that can offer orders of magnitude better efficiency in terms of performance per energy, and at the same time important improvements in raw performance. These platforms will rely on various types of units specialized for different application domains. Special focus is paid to graphics processors and brain-inspired architectures (e.g. hardware neural networks) due to their potential to exploit high degrees of parallelism and their energy efficiency for this type of applications. Extensions to existing architectures combined with novel accelerators will be explored. We also investigate the use of resilient architectures that can allow computing systems to operate at very low supply voltage levels in order to optimize their energy consumption while not compromising their reliability by providing adequate fault tolerance solutions.
  
== Memory Hierarchy ==
+
<br>
 +
= Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors III (2014-2016) =
 +
The main objective of this project as for the researchers of the ARCO group is the research in the design of future microprocessors, taking into account the determining factors of future technology, both for high performance processors and for commodity electronics.
 +
Fundamentally, two factors have determined the increased performance in processors: on one hand the technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and, on the other hand, the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. All these improvements bring a number of challenges that are now considered as key in designing the processors for this upcoming decade: the limited instruction-level parallelism, the interconnection network delays, high power consumption, heat dissipation, system relibility and security.
 +
In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors.
 +
Specifically, we will address six areas that we consider fundamental:
 +
# The efficient design of circuits in the presence of unexpected changes in its operating parameters
 +
# The efficient design of graphic processors oriented to mobile devices
 +
# The efficient implementation of virtual machines with low complexity but high computing power
 +
# The characterization and acceleration of emerging applications
 +
# The design of new heterogeneous multiprocessor architectures that optimize the use of the different processors depending on the types of application being executed
 +
# The study of new techniques in the design of the memory hierarchy and interconnection networks to tolerate the increasing gap between the speeds of the various components of the computer.
  
== Speculative Multithreaded Processors ==
+
<br>
 +
= Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors II (2010-2014) =
 +
The main objective of this project as for the researchers of the ARCO group is the research in the design of future microprocessors, taking into account the determining factors of future technology, both for high performance processors and for commodity electronics.
 +
Fundamentally, two factors have determined the increased performance in processors: on one hand the technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and, on the other hand, the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. All these improvements bring a number of challenges that are now considered as key in designing the processors for this upcoming decade: the limited instruction-level parallelism, the interconnection network delays, high power consumption, heat dissipation, system relibility and security.
 +
In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors.
 +
Specifically, we will focus on five areas which we consider to be fundamental:
 +
# The study of new techniques in the memory hierarchy design to tolerate the increasing gap between processor and memory speeds
 +
# The efficient circuit design in the face of unexpected variations of their working parameters
 +
# The implementation of efficient virtual machines of low complexity but high level computing
 +
# The implementation of intrusion detection systems to assure a high computer security level
 +
# Characterization and acceleration of emerging applications
 +
# The design of novel multithreaded processors to exploit thread-level parallelism
  
== Reliability ==
+
<br>
 
+
= Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors (2006-2010) =
== VLIW Architectures  ==
+
The main objective in this project is to research the design of next decade processors considering the requirements of the technology which is estimated to be feasible for the next years.
 +
Till recently, processor performance was mainly determined by two factors: technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. Now, new challenges are approached, for instance: high power consumption, heat dissipation, wire delays, design complexity, and the limited instruction-level parallelism.
 +
In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors. Specifically, we will focus on seven areas which we consider to be fundamental:
 +
# The reduction in power consumption and better approaches for heat dissipation
 +
# The exploitation of thread-level speculative parallelism
 +
# The design of clustered microarchitectures
 +
# The efficient implementation of ISA extensions for out-of-order processors
 +
# The efficient implementation of co-designed virtual machines;
 +
# The study of new techniques in the register file and cache memory design to tolerate the increasing gap between processor and memory speeds;
 +
# The efficient circuit design in the face of unexpected variations of their working parameters.
  
 
<br>
 
<br>
 +
= Project Bureaucracy =
 +
*[[Project Bureaucracy|'''Go to Project Bureaucracy''']]

Latest revision as of 17:34, 27 October 2020

CoCoUnit: An Energy-Efficient Processing Unit for Cognitive Computing (2019-2025)

There is a fast-growing interest in extending the capabilities of computing systems to perform human-like tasks in an intelligent way. These technologies are usually referred to as cognitive computing. We envision a next revolution in computing in the forthcoming years that will be driven by deploying many “intelligent” devices around us in all kind of environments (work, entertainment, transportation, health care, etc.) backed up by “intelligent” servers in the cloud. These cognitive computing systems will provide new user experiences by delivering new services or improving the operational efficiency of existing ones, and altogether will enrich our lives and our economy.

A key characteristic of cognitive computing systems will be their capability to process in real time large amounts of data coming from audio and vision devices, and other type of sensors. This will demand a very high computing power but at the same time an extremely low energy consumption. This very challenging energy-efficiency requirement is a sine qua non to success not only for mobile and wearable systems, where power dissipation and cost budgets are very low, but also for large data centers where energy consumption is a main component of the total cost of ownership.

Current processor architectures (including general-purpose cores and GPUs) are not a good fit for this type of systems since they keep the same basic organization as early computers, which were mainly optimized for “number crunching”. CoCoUnit will take a disruptive direction by investigating unconventional architectures that can offer orders of magnitude better efficiency in terms of performance per energy and cost for cognitive computing tasks. The ultimate goal of this project is to devise a novel processing unit that will be integrated with the existing units of a processor (general purpose cores and GPUs) and altogether will be able to deliver cognitive computing user experiences with extremely high energy-efficiency.

This project is funded by the European Research Council through the ERC Advanced Grants program.


Intelligent, Ubiquitous and Energy-Efficient Computing Systems (2016-2020)

The ultimate goal of this project is to devise novel platforms that provide rich user experiences in the areas of cognitive computing and computational intelligence in mobile devices such as smartphones or wearable devices. This project investigates novel unconventional architectures that can offer orders of magnitude better efficiency in terms of performance per energy, and at the same time important improvements in raw performance. These platforms will rely on various types of units specialized for different application domains. Special focus is paid to graphics processors and brain-inspired architectures (e.g. hardware neural networks) due to their potential to exploit high degrees of parallelism and their energy efficiency for this type of applications. Extensions to existing architectures combined with novel accelerators will be explored. We also investigate the use of resilient architectures that can allow computing systems to operate at very low supply voltage levels in order to optimize their energy consumption while not compromising their reliability by providing adequate fault tolerance solutions.


Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors III (2014-2016)

The main objective of this project as for the researchers of the ARCO group is the research in the design of future microprocessors, taking into account the determining factors of future technology, both for high performance processors and for commodity electronics. Fundamentally, two factors have determined the increased performance in processors: on one hand the technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and, on the other hand, the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. All these improvements bring a number of challenges that are now considered as key in designing the processors for this upcoming decade: the limited instruction-level parallelism, the interconnection network delays, high power consumption, heat dissipation, system relibility and security. In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors. Specifically, we will address six areas that we consider fundamental:

  1. The efficient design of circuits in the presence of unexpected changes in its operating parameters
  2. The efficient design of graphic processors oriented to mobile devices
  3. The efficient implementation of virtual machines with low complexity but high computing power
  4. The characterization and acceleration of emerging applications
  5. The design of new heterogeneous multiprocessor architectures that optimize the use of the different processors depending on the types of application being executed
  6. The study of new techniques in the design of the memory hierarchy and interconnection networks to tolerate the increasing gap between the speeds of the various components of the computer.


Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors II (2010-2014)

The main objective of this project as for the researchers of the ARCO group is the research in the design of future microprocessors, taking into account the determining factors of future technology, both for high performance processors and for commodity electronics. Fundamentally, two factors have determined the increased performance in processors: on one hand the technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and, on the other hand, the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. All these improvements bring a number of challenges that are now considered as key in designing the processors for this upcoming decade: the limited instruction-level parallelism, the interconnection network delays, high power consumption, heat dissipation, system relibility and security. In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors. Specifically, we will focus on five areas which we consider to be fundamental:

  1. The study of new techniques in the memory hierarchy design to tolerate the increasing gap between processor and memory speeds
  2. The efficient circuit design in the face of unexpected variations of their working parameters
  3. The implementation of efficient virtual machines of low complexity but high level computing
  4. The implementation of intrusion detection systems to assure a high computer security level
  5. Characterization and acceleration of emerging applications
  6. The design of novel multithreaded processors to exploit thread-level parallelism


Microarquitecture and Compilers for Future Processors (2006-2010)

The main objective in this project is to research the design of next decade processors considering the requirements of the technology which is estimated to be feasible for the next years. Till recently, processor performance was mainly determined by two factors: technological advances in microprocessor manufacturing and the use of new and more efficient microarchitectural and compiler techniques. Now, new challenges are approached, for instance: high power consumption, heat dissipation, wire delays, design complexity, and the limited instruction-level parallelism. In this project we are going to address the influence of these issues in the research of future processors. Specifically, we will focus on seven areas which we consider to be fundamental:

  1. The reduction in power consumption and better approaches for heat dissipation
  2. The exploitation of thread-level speculative parallelism
  3. The design of clustered microarchitectures
  4. The efficient implementation of ISA extensions for out-of-order processors
  5. The efficient implementation of co-designed virtual machines;
  6. The study of new techniques in the register file and cache memory design to tolerate the increasing gap between processor and memory speeds;
  7. The efficient circuit design in the face of unexpected variations of their working parameters.


Project Bureaucracy