Resumen
Some processors designed for consumer applications, such as Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) and the CELL processor, promise outstanding floating-point performance for scientific applications at commodity prices. However, IEEE single precision is the most precise floating-point data type these processors directly support in hardware. Pairs of native floating-point numbers can be used to represent a base result and a residual term to increase accuracy, but the resulting order of magnitude slowdown dramatically reduces the price/performance advantage of these systems. By adding a few simple microarchitectural features, acceptable accuracy can be obtained with relatively little performance penalty. To reduce the cost of native-pair arithmetic, a residual register is used to hold information that would normally have been discarded after each floating-point computation. The residual register dramatically simplifies the code, providing both lower latency and better instruction-level parallelism.
| Idioma original | English |
|---|---|
| Páginas (desde-hasta) | 13-16 |
| Número de páginas | 4 |
| Publicación | IEEE Computer Architecture Letters |
| Volumen | 6 |
| N.º | 1 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Published - ene 2007 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Hardware and Architecture
Huella
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