MANA: Microarchitecting an Instruction Prefetcher

02/02/2021
by   Ali Ansari, et al.
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L1 instruction (L1-I) cache misses are a source of performance bottleneck. Sequential prefetchers are simple solutions to mitigate this problem; however, prior work has shown that these prefetchers leave considerable potentials uncovered. This observation has motivated many researchers to come up with more advanced instruction prefetchers. In 2011, Proactive Instruction Fetch (PIF) showed that a hardware prefetcher could effectively eliminate all of the instruction-cache misses. However, its enormous storage cost makes it an impractical solution. Consequently, reducing the storage cost was the main research focus in the instruction prefetching in the past decade. Several instruction prefetchers, including RDIP and Shotgun, were proposed to offer PIF-level performance with significantly lower storage overhead. However, our findings show that there is a considerable performance gap between these proposals and PIF. While these proposals use different mechanisms for instruction prefetching, the performance gap is largely not because of the mechanism, and instead, is due to not having sufficient storage. Prior proposals suffer from one or both of the following shortcomings: (1) a large number of metadata records to cover the potential, and (2) a high storage cost of each record. The first problem causes metadata miss, and the second problem prohibits the prefetcher from storing enough records within reasonably-sized storage.

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