PDIP: Priority Directed Instruction Prefetching
Bhargav Reddy Godala, S. Ramesh, Gilles Pokam, Jared Stark, André Seznec, Dean M. Tullsen, David I. August
Abstract
Modern server workloads have large code footprints which are prone to front-end bottlenecks due to instruction cache capacity misses. Even with the aggressive fetch directed instruction prefetching (FDIP), implemented in modern processors, there are still significant front-end stalls due to I-Cache misses. A major portion of misses that occur on a BPU-predicted path are tolerated by FDIP without causing stalls. Prior work on instruction prefetching, however, has not been designed to work with FDIP processors. Their singular goal is reducing I-Cache misses, whereas FDIP processors are designed to tolerate them. Designing an instruction prefetcher that works in conjunction with FDIP requires identifying the fraction of cache misses that impact front-end performance (that are not fully hidden by FDIP), and only targeting them.