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In-Datacenter Performance Analysis of a Tensor Processing Unit

Norman P. Jouppi, Cliff Young, Nishant Patil, David Patterson, Gaurav Agrawal, Raminder Bajwa, Sarah Bates, Suresh Bhatia, Nan Boden, Al Borchers, Rick Boyle, Pierre-luc Cantin, Clifford Chao, Chris Clark, Jeremy Coriell, Mike Daley, Matt Dau, Jeffrey Dean, Ben Gelb, Tara Vazir Ghaemmaghami, Rajendra Gottipati, William Gulland, Robert Hagmann, C. Richard Ho, Doug Hogberg, John Hu, Robert Hundt, Dan Hurt, Julian Ibarz, Aaron Jaffey, Alek Jaworski, Alexander Kaplan, Harshit Khaitan, Andy Koch, Naveen Kumar, Steve Lacy, James Laudon, James Law, Diemthu Le, Chris Leary, Zhuyuan Liu, Kyle Lucke, Alan Lundin, Gordon MacKean, Adriana Maggiore, Maire Mahony, Kieran Miller, Rahul Nagarajan, Ravi Narayanaswami, Ray Ni, Kathy Nix, Thomas Norrie, Mark Omernick, Narayana Penukonda, Andy Phelps, Jonathan Ross, Matt Ross, Amir Salek, Emad Samadiani, Chris Severn, Gregory Sizikov, Matthew Snelham, Jed Souter, Dan Steinberg, Andy Swing, Mercedes Tan, Gregory Thorson, Bo Tian, Horia Toma, Erick Tuttle, Vijay Vasudevan, Richard Walter, Walter Wang, Eric Wilcox, Doe Hyun Yoon
Google, Inc., Mountain View, CA USA
44th International Symposium on Computer Architecture (ISCA), 2017

@article{jouppi2017indatacenter,

   title={In-Datacenter Performance Analysis of a Tensor Processing Unit},

   author={Jouppi, Norman P. and Young, Cliff and Patil, Nishant and Patterson, David and Agrawal, Gaurav and Bajwa, Raminder and Bates, Sarah and Bhatia, Suresh and Boden, Nan and Borchers, Al and Boyle, Rick and Cantin, Pierre-luc and Chao, Clifford and Clark, Chris and Coriell, Jeremy and Daley, Mike and Dau, Matt and Dean, Jeffrey and Gelb, Ben and Ghaemmaghami, Tara Vazir and Gottipati, Rajendra and Gulland, William and Hagmann, Robert and Ho, C. Richard and Hogberg, Doug and Hu, John and Hundt, Robert and Hurt, Dan and Ibarz, Julian and Jaffey, Aaron and Jaworski, Alek and Kaplan, Alexander and Khaitan, Harshit and Koch, Andy and Kumar, Naveen and Lacy, Steve and Laudon, James and Law, James and Le, Diemthu and Leary, Chris and Liu, Zhuyuan and Lucke, Kyle and Lundin, Alan and MacKean, Gordon and Maggiore, Adriana and Mahony, Maire and Miller, Kieran and Nagarajan, Rahul and Narayanaswami, Ravi and Ni, Ray and Nix, Kathy and Norrie, Thomas and Omernick, Mark and Penukonda, Narayana and Phelps, Andy and Ross, Jonathan and Ross, Matt and Salek, Amir and Samadiani, Emad and Severn, Chris and Sizikov, Gregory and Snelham, Matthew and Souter, Jed and Steinberg, Dan and Swing, Andy and Tan, Mercedes and Thorson, Gregory and Tian, Bo and Toma, Horia and Tuttle, Erick and Vasudevan, Vijay and Walter, Richard and Wang, Walter and Wilcox, Eric and Yoon, Doe Hyun},

   year={2017}

}

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Many architects believe that major improvements in cost-energy-performance must now come from domain-specific hardware. This paper evaluates a custom ASIC-called a Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) – deployed in datacenters since 2015 that accelerates the inference phase of neural networks (NN). The heart of the TPU is a 65,536 8-bit MAC matrix multiply unit that offers a peak throughput of 92 TeraOps/second (TOPS) and a large (28 MiB) software-managed on-chip memory. The TPU’s deterministic execution model is a better match to the 99th-percentile response-time requirement of our NN applications than are the time-varying optimizations of CPUs and GPUs (caches, out-of-order execution, multithreading, multiprocessing, prefetching, …) that help average throughput more than guaranteed latency. The lack of such features helps explain why, despite having myriad MACs and a big memory, the TPU is relatively small and low power. We compare the TPU to a server-class Intel Haswell CPU and an Nvidia K80 GPU, which are contemporaries deployed in the same datacenters. Our workload, written in the high-level TensorFlow framework, uses production NN applications (MLPs, CNNs, and LSTMs) that represent 95% of our datacenters’ NN inference demand. Despite low utilization for some applications, the TPU is on average about 15X – 30X faster than its contemporary GPU or CPU, with TOPS/Watt about 30X – 80X higher. Moreover, using the GPU’s GDDR5 memory in the TPU would triple achieved TOPS and raise TOPS/Watt to nearly 70X the GPU and 200X the CPU.
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