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As DRAM access latencies approach a thousand instruction-execution times and on-chip caches grow to multiple megabytes, it is not clear that conventional cache structures continue to be appropriate. Two key features—full associativity and software management—have been used successfully in the virtual-memory domain to cope with disk access latencies. Future systems will need to employ similar techniques to deal with DRAM latencies. This paper presents a practical, fully associative, software-managed secondary cache system that provides performance competitive with or superior to traditional caches without OS or application involvement. We see this structure as the first step toward OS- and application-aware management of large on-chip caches.
Hallnor et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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