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The Impact of a Realistic Cache Structure on a Statically Scheduled Architecture
Västerås, Sweden August 25-August 27
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/EURMIC.1998.71182024 th. EUROMICRO Conference Volume 1 ...
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Daniel Tate, University of Hertfordshire
Gordon Steven, University of Hertfordshire
Paul Findlay, University of Hertfordshire
Memory hierarchy has been accepted as the most limiting factor in current MII processors [1]. For architectures that employ static instruction scheduling, memory performance is of increasing importance, since the instruction scheduling process tends to increase code size. This paper looks at the impact of a realistic memory hierarchy on a minimal superscalar processor model which uses aggressive static instruction scheduling techniques. The divergent performance impact of a cache on scheduled and unscheduled code is quantified, as well as the resultant effect on overall scheduling speed-up.
Citation:
Daniel Tate, Gordon Steven, Paul Findlay, "The Impact of a Realistic Cache Structure on a Statically Scheduled Architecture," euromicro, vol. 1, pp.10325, 24 th. EUROMICRO Conference Volume 1 (EUROMICRO'98), 1998
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