Skip to content

Source code for the architectural and circuit-level simulators used for modeling the CROW (Copy-ROW DRAM) mechanism proposed in our ISCA 2019 paper "CROW: A Low-Cost Substrate for Improving DRAM Performance, Energy Efficiency, and Reliability". Paper is at: https://people.inf.ethz.ch/omutlu/pub/CROW-DRAM-substrate-for-performance-energy-reliabil…

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

CMU-SAFARI/CROW

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Copy-row DRAM (CROW)

Source code of the simulators used to evaluate the mechanisms presented in the ISCA'19 paper:

H. Hassan, M. Patel, J. S. Kim, A. G. Yağlıkçı, N. Vijaykumar, N. Mansouri Ghiasi, S. Ghose, O. Mutlu. "CROW: A Low-Cost Substrate for Improving DRAM Performance, Energy Efficiency, and Reliability". In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA), June 2019.

The presentations of the paper are available on YouTube:

Lightning Talk Video
Full Talk Video

The architectural simulator is built on Ramulator, which is described in this earlier work:

Yoongu Kim, Weikun Yang, and Onur Mutlu, "Ramulator: A Fast and Extensible DRAM Simulator". IEEE Computer Architecture Letters (CAL), March 2015.

Please cite the above works if you make use of the tools provided in this repository.

1. Evaluating CROW's Performance

Ramulator is a cycle-accurate memory simulator that support a wide array of commercial and academic DRAM standards. We have modified the memory controller of Ramulator to evaluate the performance of the CROW-cache and CROW-ref mechanisms proposed in our paper.

To build Ramulator, just run the following commands:

    $ cd ramulator
    $ make -j

To start simulation with default CROW-cache and CROW-ref parameters, run:

    $ ./run.sh

Note that the script will run a very quick simulation using a small trace file. Please refer to the original Ramulator repository for traces collected from real workloads.

To change CROW configuration, you may either edit the configuration file configs/CROW_configs/LPDDR4.cfg or edit the run.sh script to provide command-line parameters when starting the ramulator executable. Here are some of the key CROW command-line arguments:

  • copy_rows_per_SA - the number of copy rows per subarray. copy_rows_per_SA=0 disables both CROW-cache and CROW-ref
  • enable_crow_upperbound - When true, it enables hypothetical CROW-cache with 100% hit rate
  • weak_rows_per_SA - the number of weak regular rows per subarray. CROW-ref remaps these rows to the copy rows. The rest of the available copy rows can be utilized by CROW-cache. Set copy_rows_per_SA and weak_rows_per_SA to the same value to enable only CROW-ref but not CROW-cache.
  • refresh_mult - refresh interval multiplier when CROW-ref is enabled. After remapping the weak rows, CROW-ref multiplies the default refresh interval by this parameter to reduce the DRAM refresh rate.

You can find all configuration parameters in src/Config.h.

You can execute run_sweep_copy_rows.sh to simulate CROW-cache by sweeping the number of copy rows per subarray. This can be used to recreate the Figure 8 in the paper. The script uses traces collected from a SPEC2006 workload, bzip2, as input workload. Edit the script to simulate more workloads. You can find more workload traces in the original Ramulator repository.

This repository also implements TL-DRAM and SALP, the two in-DRAM caching mechanisms we compare CROW-cache against in the paper. We provide a bash script, run_crow_tl-dram_salp.sh, which can be run simulate bzip2 with CROW-cache, TL-DRAM, and SALP configurations. The output can be used to recreate Figure 11 in the paper.

Also, please refer to the original Ramulator repository for additional details on Ramulator's source code.

2. Circuit-level Simulations

We use LTSpice based DRAM circuit-level simulation to evaluate the latency of two-row (and multiple-row) activation. We have used LTSpice on a Linux system using Wine.

Installation

  1. If you are using a Linux system, first, install Wine. In Debian-based systems, you can use the following command: $ apt install wine
  2. Download LTSpice and follow the instructions to install.
  3. Edit LTSpice_executable_path in file SPICESim/LTspice-cli/config.py to point to the LTSpice executable.
  4. Run make inside the SPICESim directory to build the simple parser application used to process the raw output produced by LTSpice.

Running LTSpice Simulation

For a quick run, you can just run the following command:

    $ ./run_sim.sh

This will perform circuit-level simulation to estimate tRCD/tRAS/tWR timing parameters when simultaneously activating 1 to 8 rows that contain the same data.

About

Source code for the architectural and circuit-level simulators used for modeling the CROW (Copy-ROW DRAM) mechanism proposed in our ISCA 2019 paper "CROW: A Low-Cost Substrate for Improving DRAM Performance, Energy Efficiency, and Reliability". Paper is at: https://people.inf.ethz.ch/omutlu/pub/CROW-DRAM-substrate-for-performance-energy-reliabil…

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published