Why Comparing System-Level MPSoC Mapping Approaches is Difficult A Case Study

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2016
Book title Proceedings, IEEE 10th International Symposium on Embedded Multicore/Many-core Systems-on-Chip
Book subtitle 21-23 September 2016, Lyon, France
ISBN
  • 9781509035328
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9781509035311
Event IEEE 10th International Symposium on Embedded Multicore/Many-core Systems-on-Chip
Pages (from-to) 281-288
Number of pages 8
Publisher Los Alamitos, California : IEEE Computer Society
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
Abstract
Software abstractions are crucial to effectively program heterogeneous Multi-Processor Systems on Chip (MPSoCs). Prime examples of such abstractions are Kahn Process Networks (KPNs) and execution traces. When modeling computation as a KPN, one of the key challenges is to obtain a good mapping, i.e., an assignment of logical computation and communication to physical resources. In this paper we compare two system-level frameworks for solving the mapping problem: Sesame and MAPS. These frameworks, while superficially similar, embody different approaches. Sesame, motivated by modeling and design-space exploration, uses evolutionary algorithms for mapping. MAPS, being a compiler framework, uses simple and fast heuristics instead. In this work we highlight the value of common abstractions, such as KPNs and traces, as a vehicle to enable comparisons between large independent frameworks. These types of comparisons are fundamental for advancing research in the area. At the same time, we illustrate how the lack of formalized models at the hardware level are an obstacle to achieving fair comparisons. Additionally, using a set of applications from the embedded systems domain, we observe that genetic algorithms tend to outperform heuristics by a factor between 1× and 5×, with notable exceptions. This performance comes at the cost of a longer computation time, between 0 and 2 orders of magnitude in our experiments.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1109/MCSoC.2016.48 https://doi.org/10.1109/MCSoC.2016.48
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