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Transactional Memory CDA6159. Outline Introduction Paper 1: Architectural Support for Lock-Free Data Structures (Maurice Herlihy, ISCA ‘93) Paper 2: Transactional.

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Presentation on theme: "Transactional Memory CDA6159. Outline Introduction Paper 1: Architectural Support for Lock-Free Data Structures (Maurice Herlihy, ISCA ‘93) Paper 2: Transactional."— Presentation transcript:

1 Transactional Memory CDA6159

2 Outline Introduction Paper 1: Architectural Support for Lock-Free Data Structures (Maurice Herlihy, ISCA ‘93) Paper 2: Transactional Memory Coherence and Consistency (Lance Hammond, ISCA ‘04)

3 Introduction Transaction A sequence of actions that appears indivisible and instantaneous to an outside observer. Four specific attributes: atomicity, consistency, isolation, and durability — collectively known as the ACID properties.

4 Introduction Concurrency control Lock? Bad performance, deadlock, etc. lock-free, optimistic cc Herlihy and Moss in 1993 proposed hardware-supported transactional memory as a mechanism for building lock-free data structures.

5 Basic Transactional Mechanisms Isolation  Detect when transactions conflict  Track read and write sets Version management  Record new and old values Atomicity  Commit new values  Abort back to old values

6 H/W Transactional Memory Systems Knight’s Lisp Work Transactional Memory Oklahoma Update SLE/TLR Transactional Coherence and Consistency Unbounded TM Virtual TM Thread-level TM

7 Outline Introduction Paper 1: Architectural Support for Lock-Free Data Structures (Maurice Herlihy, ISCA ‘93) Paper 2: Transactional Memory Coherence and Consistency (Lance Hammond, ISCA ‘04)

8 Lock and Problems Lock is commonly used with shared data Priority Inversion  Lower priority process hold a lock needed by a higher priority process Convoy Effect  When lock holder is interrupted, other is forced to wait Deadlock  Circular dependence between different processes acquiring locks, so everyone just wait for locks

9 H&M ’ s Transactional Memory [ ’ 93] Intended to replace short critical sections  Motivated by lock-free data structures Transactions:  Read and write multiple locations  Commit in arbitrary order  Implicit begin, explicit commit operations  Abort affects memory, not registers Software manages restarting execution Validate instruction detects pending abort Implementation extends cache coherence  Read/Write locks correspond to MESI states  Add orthogonal transaction states

10 Transactional Hardware State processor state  transaction active flag (TACTIVE) whether a transaction is in progress; implicitly set by 1 st xactional op  transaction status flag (TSTATUS) whether the transaction is active (true) or aborted (false) small, fully-associative xactional cache disjoint from the L1 cache (data can only be one or the other)  hold tentative writes before propagation invalidated if aborted, snooped and/or written back if committed  2 copies of each xactional line to avoid writebacks to memory; this enables xactional writes to hold both old & new value  abort another xaction that will cause conflict  aborted by interrupts & xactional cache overflows  act like regular cache if not in xaction  fast commit and abort (in a single cache cycle)

11 TM Instructions Instructions for accessing memory  Load-transactional (LT) Reads from shared memory into private register  Load-transactional-exclusive (LTX) LT+ hinting write is coming up  Store-transactional (ST) Tentatively write from private register to shared memory, new value is not visible to other processors till commit Instructions for manupulating xaction state  Commit Tries to make tentative write permanent. Successful if no other processor read its write set or write its read/write set. Write set visible to others. When fails, discard all updates to write set  Abort Discard all updates to write set  Validate Return current transaction status. Indicating whether it’s aborted. If current status is false, discard all updates to write set

12 Transaction Example /* keep trying */ While ( true ) { /* read variables */ v1 = LT ( V1 ); … ; vn = LT ( Vn ); /* check consistency */ if ( ! VALIDATE () ) continue; /* compute new values */ compute ( v1, …, vn); /* write tentative values */ ST (v1, V1); … ST(vn, Vn); /* try to commit */ if ( COMMIT () ) return result; else backoff; }

13 Transactional Cache Extend cache coherency protocols  any protocol capable of detecting accessibility conflicts can also detect transaction conflict at no extra cost.  Includes bus snoopy, directory Additional transactional tag  EMPTY, NORMAL, XCOMMIT, XABORT  Two entries per xaction data XCOMMIT, XABORT  Allocation policy EMPTY>NORMAL>XCOMMIT Bus cycles  T_READ and T_RFO(read for ownership)  BUSY R equest can be refused by responding BUSY; When BUSY is received, xaction is aborted; This prevents deadlock and continual mutual aborts

14 Processor Operations LT  Check for XABORT entry  If false, check for NORMAL entry Switch NORMAL to XABORT and allocate XCOMMIT  If false, issue T_READ on bus, then allocate XABORT and XCOMMIT  If T_READ receive BUSY, abort Set TSTATUS to false Drop all XABORT entries Set all XCOMMIT entries to NORMAL Return random data LTX, ST  Same as LT Except Use T_RFO on a miss rather than T_READ, cache line state to RESERVED For ST, XABORT entry is updated

15 Processor Operations VALIDATE  Return TSTATUS flag  If false, set TSTATUS true, TACTIVE false ABORT  Set TSTATUS true, TACTIVE false  Change XABORT to EMPTY, XCOMMIT to NORMAL COMMIT  Return TSTATUS, set TSTATUS true, TACTIVE false  Drops all XCOMMIT and changes all XABORT to NORMAL

16 Snoopy Cache Actions Regular cache  acts as MESI, treats READ as T_READ, RFO as T_RFO Transactional cache  Non-xactional cycle: Acts like regular cache, NORMAL entries only  T_READ: If the the entry is valid (share), returns the value  All other cycle: BUSY Memory  Responds to READ, T_READ, RFO, T_RFO when no cache responds;  WRITE

17 Advantage and disadvantage Single cache for both reg/xaction data  Set size would determine the max xaction size;  Parallel commit/abort logic for a larger cache Xaction size is limited by the xactional cache size  Overflow, traps into software  Xaction data set is small Cannot survive interrupt

18 Simulation Proteus Simulator 32 processors Regular cache  Direct mapped, 2048 8-byte lines Transactional cache  Fully associative, 64 8-byte lines Single cycle caches access 4 cycle memory access Both snoopy bus and directory are simulated 2 stage network with switch delay of 1 cycle each

19 Benchmarks Counter  n processors, each increment a shared counter (2^16)/n times Producer/Consumer buffer  n/2 processors produce, n/2 processor consume through a shared FIFO  end when 2^16 items are consumed Doubly-linked list  N processors tries to rotate the content from tail to head  End when 2^16 items are moved  Variables shared are conditional  Traditional locking method can introduce deadlock

20 Comparisons Competitors  Transactional memory  Load-locked/store-cond (Alpha)  Spin lock with backoff  Software queue  Hardware queue

21 Counter Result

22 Producer/Consumer Result

23 Doubly Linked List Result

24 Conclusion Avoid extra lock variable and lock problems Trade dead lock for possible live lock/starvation Comparable performance to lock technique when shared data structure is small Relatively easy to implement

25 Outline Introduction Paper 1: Architectural Support for Lock-Free Data Structures (Maurice Herlihy, ISCA ‘93) Paper 2: Transactional Memory Coherence and Consistency (Lance Hammond, ISCA ‘04)

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44 Basic TCC Transaction Control Bits In each local cache  Read bits (per cache line, or per word to eliminate false sharing) Set on speculative loads Snooped by a committing transaction (writes by other CPU)  Modified bits (per cache line) Set on speculative stores Indicate what to rollback if a violation is detected Different from dirty bit

45 During A Transaction Commit Need to collect all of the modified caches together into a commit packet Potential solutions  A separate write buffer, or  An address buffer maintaining a list of the line tags to be committed  Size? Broadcast all writes out as one single (large) packet to the rest of the system

46 Other Rollback is needed when a transaction cannot commit Checkpoints needed prior to a transaction Checkpoint register state  Hardware approach: Flash-copying rename table / arch register file  Software approach: extra instruction overheads Overflow issue  Conflict or capacity misses require all the victim lines to be kept somewhere (e.g. victim cache)  Stall temporarily, request for commit

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54 Thanks!


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