Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing

Electronic applications are nowadays converging under the umbrella of the cloud computing vision. The future ecosystem of information and communication technology is going to integrate clouds of portable clients and embedded devices exchanging information, through the internet layer, with processing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bartolini, Andrea <1981>
Other Authors: Benini, Luca
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3558/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-35582014-03-24T16:29:13Z Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing Bartolini, Andrea <1981> ING-INF/01 Elettronica Electronic applications are nowadays converging under the umbrella of the cloud computing vision. The future ecosystem of information and communication technology is going to integrate clouds of portable clients and embedded devices exchanging information, through the internet layer, with processing clusters of servers, data-centers and high performance computing systems. Even thus the whole society is waiting to embrace this revolution, there is a backside of the story. Portable devices require battery to work far from the power plugs and their storage capacity does not scale as the increasing power requirement does. At the other end processing clusters, such as data-centers and server farms, are build upon the integration of thousands multiprocessors. For each of them during the last decade the technology scaling has produced a dramatic increase in power density with significant spatial and temporal variability. This leads to power and temperature hot-spots, which may cause non-uniform ageing and accelerated chip failure. Nonetheless all the heat removed from the silicon translates in high cooling costs. Moreover trend in ICT carbon footprint shows that run-time power consumption of the all spectrum of devices accounts for a significant slice of entire world carbon emissions. This thesis work embrace the full ICT ecosystem and dynamic power consumption concerns by describing a set of new and promising system levels resource management techniques to reduce the power consumption and related issues for two corner cases: Mobile Devices and High Performance Computing. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Benini, Luca 2011-05-06 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3558/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic ING-INF/01 Elettronica
spellingShingle ING-INF/01 Elettronica
Bartolini, Andrea <1981>
Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
description Electronic applications are nowadays converging under the umbrella of the cloud computing vision. The future ecosystem of information and communication technology is going to integrate clouds of portable clients and embedded devices exchanging information, through the internet layer, with processing clusters of servers, data-centers and high performance computing systems. Even thus the whole society is waiting to embrace this revolution, there is a backside of the story. Portable devices require battery to work far from the power plugs and their storage capacity does not scale as the increasing power requirement does. At the other end processing clusters, such as data-centers and server farms, are build upon the integration of thousands multiprocessors. For each of them during the last decade the technology scaling has produced a dramatic increase in power density with significant spatial and temporal variability. This leads to power and temperature hot-spots, which may cause non-uniform ageing and accelerated chip failure. Nonetheless all the heat removed from the silicon translates in high cooling costs. Moreover trend in ICT carbon footprint shows that run-time power consumption of the all spectrum of devices accounts for a significant slice of entire world carbon emissions. This thesis work embrace the full ICT ecosystem and dynamic power consumption concerns by describing a set of new and promising system levels resource management techniques to reduce the power consumption and related issues for two corner cases: Mobile Devices and High Performance Computing.
author2 Benini, Luca
author_facet Benini, Luca
Bartolini, Andrea <1981>
author Bartolini, Andrea <1981>
author_sort Bartolini, Andrea <1981>
title Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
title_short Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
title_full Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
title_fullStr Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
title_sort dynamic power management: from portable devices to high performance computing
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2011
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3558/
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