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Conference Paper: Fast approximation for peak power driven voltage partitioning in almost linear time

TitleFast approximation for peak power driven voltage partitioning in almost linear time
Authors
KeywordsEnergy Efficiency
Linear Time Approximation Scheme
Peak Power
Voltage Partitioning
Issue Date2012
Citation
IEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design, Digest of Technical Papers, ICCAD, 2012, p. 698-704 How to Cite?
AbstractVoltage partitioning on functional units/blocks targeting peak power minimization has been demonstrated to be effective for energy reduction considering voltage island shutdown impact. However, the existing technique can only solve this NP-hard problem efficiently on small designs. In this paper, a much faster linear time approximation scheme is proposed, which can approximate the optimal voltage partitioning solution within a factor 1+, for any 0 < < 1, and runs in O(n + 1/O(1)) time, where n is the number of functional units. There are multiple ingredients in such a surprisingly low time complexity algorithm. It first categorizes all the functional units into big functional units and small functional units using an related threshold. Subsequently, a rounding based dynamic programming procedure is performed to handle big functional units and a linear programming based algorithm is performed to handle small functional units, which is followed by the discretization of the continuous linear programming solution. Moreover, through the exploration of the unique nature of our problem, a greedy algorithm is proposed to optimally solve the linear programming formulation in a combinatorial fashion. Further, since patching a salient partitioning solution of big functional units with that of small functional units could lead to a much worse combined solution, a highly efficient enumeration process running in time independent of n is proposed. The experimental results demonstrate that our algorithm runs very fast. It needs only 0.3 second to partition a testcase with 5000 functional units which is more than 10000 X faster than the existing algorithm while still reducing the peak power by 7.4%. © 2012 ACM.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/336106
ISSN
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 0.894

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorWang, Jia-
dc.contributor.authorChen, Xiaodao-
dc.contributor.authorLiu, Lin-
dc.contributor.authorHu, Shiyan-
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-15T08:23:31Z-
dc.date.available2024-01-15T08:23:31Z-
dc.date.issued2012-
dc.identifier.citationIEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design, Digest of Technical Papers, ICCAD, 2012, p. 698-704-
dc.identifier.issn1092-3152-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/336106-
dc.description.abstractVoltage partitioning on functional units/blocks targeting peak power minimization has been demonstrated to be effective for energy reduction considering voltage island shutdown impact. However, the existing technique can only solve this NP-hard problem efficiently on small designs. In this paper, a much faster linear time approximation scheme is proposed, which can approximate the optimal voltage partitioning solution within a factor 1+, for any 0 < < 1, and runs in O(n + 1/O(1)) time, where n is the number of functional units. There are multiple ingredients in such a surprisingly low time complexity algorithm. It first categorizes all the functional units into big functional units and small functional units using an related threshold. Subsequently, a rounding based dynamic programming procedure is performed to handle big functional units and a linear programming based algorithm is performed to handle small functional units, which is followed by the discretization of the continuous linear programming solution. Moreover, through the exploration of the unique nature of our problem, a greedy algorithm is proposed to optimally solve the linear programming formulation in a combinatorial fashion. Further, since patching a salient partitioning solution of big functional units with that of small functional units could lead to a much worse combined solution, a highly efficient enumeration process running in time independent of n is proposed. The experimental results demonstrate that our algorithm runs very fast. It needs only 0.3 second to partition a testcase with 5000 functional units which is more than 10000 X faster than the existing algorithm while still reducing the peak power by 7.4%. © 2012 ACM.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofIEEE/ACM International Conference on Computer-Aided Design, Digest of Technical Papers, ICCAD-
dc.subjectEnergy Efficiency-
dc.subjectLinear Time Approximation Scheme-
dc.subjectPeak Power-
dc.subjectVoltage Partitioning-
dc.titleFast approximation for peak power driven voltage partitioning in almost linear time-
dc.typeConference_Paper-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1145/2429384.2429537-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-84872308349-
dc.identifier.spage698-
dc.identifier.epage704-

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