Hardware-Aware Data and Instruction Mapping for AI Tasks: Balancing Parallelism, I/O and Memory Tradeoffs
Abstract: We introduce a mapping framework for deep learning inference that takes advantage of predictable neural network behavior to plan both computation and communication ahead of time. The framework generates a unified stream of instructions and data, enabling the hardware to execute operations and route information on its own, without frequent involvement from the host and with minimal off-chip memory use. This naturally reduces reliance on I/O, off-chip memory, and host control. By leveraging fine-grained message passing on a programmable, message-based compute architecture, the framework keeps data movement local and coordinates computation across the array using techniques such as stationary-weight reuse, in-array multicasting, and staged reductions. Applied to VGG-19, the framework sustains high utilization (88 to 92 percent), with over 97 percent of messages generated internally and nearly 89 percent of time consumed on-chip transfers. Computation throughput scales beyond 1 TFLOP/s on larger arrays, while traffic reductions from reuse and local aggregation reach up to 100 MB per layer. Overall, the results highlight the effectiveness of streaming-based computation and show how our mapper enables this execution style by tightly coordinating data and instruction flow across the hardware.
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