| Performance, Cost, and Energy Evaluation of Fat H-Tree: A Cost-Efficient Tree-Based On-Chip Network ∗ (2009) | |||||||||||||||
Abstract | |||||||||||||||
| Fat H-Tree is a novel tree-based interconnection network providing a torus structure, which is formed by combining two folded H-Tree networks, and is an attractive alternative to tree-based networks such as Fat Trees in a microarchitecture domain. In this paper, we introduce Fat H-Tree and its deadlock-free routing algorithms. The performance of Fat H-Tree is evaluated using real application traces, and the result is compared with those of other tree-based networks. The network logic area and wire resources for Fat H-Tree are computed based on a typical implementation of on-chip routers using a 0.18µm standard cell library. In addition, the energy consumption is estimated based on the gate-level power analysis. The results show that 1) Fat H-Tree outperforms Fat Tree with two upward and four downward connections in terms of throughput and average hop count; 2) Fat H-Tree requires 19.3%-26.4 % smaller network logic area compared with the Fat Tree; 3) Fat H-Tree consumes 8.3%-8.6 % less energy compared with the Fat Tree due to its short average hop count; 4) Fat H-Tree uses slightly more wire resources compared with the Fat Tree, but the current process technology can provide sufficient wire resources for implementing Fat H-Tree based on-chip networks. 1 | |||||||||||||||
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