Title
Programming the Intel 80-core network-on-a-chip Terascale Processor
Abstract
Intel's 80-core terascale processor was the first generally programmable microprocessor to break the Teraflops barrier. The primary goal for the chip was to study power management and on-die communication technologies. When announced in 2007, it received a great deal of attention for running a stencil kernel at 1.0 single precision TFLOPS while using only 97 Watts. The literature about the chip, however, focused on the hardware, saying little about the software environment or the kernels used to evaluate the chip. This paper completes the literature on the 80-core terascale processor by fully defining the chip's software environment. We describe the instruction set, the programming environment, the kernels written for the chip, and our experiences programming this microprocessor. We close by discussing the lessons learned from this project and what it implies for future message passing, network-on-a-chip processors.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1109/SC.2008.5213921
Austin, TX
Keywords
Field
DocType
message passing,microprocessor chips,network-on-chip,Intel 80-core network-on-a-chip terascale processor,TFLOPS,message passing,on-die communication technologies,power management,programmable microprocessor
Instruction set,Computer science,Software,Message passing,Intel 4004,Distributed computing,Microprocessor,Parallel computing,Network on a chip,Chip,Operating system,Debugging,Embedded system
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4244-2835-9
43
3.00
References 
Authors
3
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Timothy G. Mattson140833.63
Rob F. Van der Wijngaart237445.61
Michael A. Frumkin312619.68