Twin-Load: Building a Scalable Memory System over the Non-Scalable Interface


Abstract in English

Commodity memory interfaces have difficulty in scaling memory capacity to meet the needs of modern multicore and big data systems. DRAM device density and maximum device count are constrained by technology, package, and signal in- tegrity issues that limit total memory capacity. Synchronous DRAM protocols require data to be returned within a fixed latency, and thus memory extension methods over commodity DDRx interfaces fail to support scalable topologies. Current extension approaches either use slow PCIe interfaces, or require expensive changes to the memory interface, which limits commercial adoptability. Here we propose twin-load, a lightweight asynchronous memory access mechanism over the synchronous DDRx interface. Twin-load uses two special loads to accomplish one access request to extended memory, the first serves as a prefetch command to the DRAM system, and the second asynchronously gets the required data. Twin-load requires no hardware changes on the processor side and only slight soft- ware modifications. We emulate this system on a prototype to demonstrate the feasibility of our approach. Twin-load has comparable performance to NUMA extended memory and outperforms a page-swapping PCIe-based system by several orders of magnitude. Twin-load thus enables instant capacity increases on commodity platforms, but more importantly, our architecture opens opportunities for the design of novel, efficient, scalable, cost-effective memory subsystems.

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