Improving Branch Prediction By Modeling Global History with Convolutional Neural Networks

20 Jun 2019  ·  Stephen J Tarsa, Chit-Kwan Lin, Gokce Keskin, Gautham Chinya, Hong Wang ·

CPU branch prediction has hit a wall--existing techniques achieve near-perfect accuracy on 99% of static branches, and yet the mispredictions that remain hide major performance gains. In a companion report, we show that a primary source of mispredictions is a handful of systematically hard-to-predict branches (H2Ps), e.g. just 10 static instructions per SimPoint phase in SPECint 2017. The lost opportunity posed by these mispredictions is significant to the CPU: 14.0% in instructions-per-cycle (IPC) on Intel SkyLake and 37.4% IPC when the pipeline is scaled four-fold, on par with gains from process technology. However, up to 80% of this upside is unreachable by the best known branch predictors, even when afforded exponentially more resources. New approaches are needed, and machine learning (ML) provides a palette of powerful predictors. A growing body of work has shown that ML models are deployable within the microarchitecture to optimize hardware at runtime, and are one way to customize CPUs post-silicon by training to customer applications. We develop this scenario for branch prediction using convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to boost accuracy for H2Ps. Step-by-step, we (1) map CNNs to the global history data used by existing branch predictors; (2) show how CNNs improve H2P prediction in SPEC 2017; (3) adapt 2-bit CNN inference to the constraints of current branch prediction units; and (4) establish that CNN helper predictors are reusable across application executions on different inputs, enabling us to amortize offline training and deploy ML pattern matching to improve IPC.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Tasks


Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here