The concept of stack distance, applicable to the important class of inclusion replacement policies for the memory hierarchy, enables to efficiently compute the number of misses incurred on a given address trace, for all cache sizes. The concept was introduced by Mattson, Gecsei, Sluts, and Traiger (Evaluation techniques for storage hierarchies, IBM System Journal, (9)2:78-117, 1970), together with a Linear-Scan algorithm, which takes time O(V) per access, in the worst case, where V is the number of distinct (virtual) items referenced within the trace. While subsequent work has lowered the time bound to O(log V) per access in the special case of the Least Recently Used policy, no improvements have been obtained for the general case. This wo...
This paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREWPRAM. The...
Modern processors use high-performance cache replacement policies that outperform traditional altern...
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xp...
The concept of stack distance, applicable to the important class of inclusion replacement policies f...
The replacement policies known as MIN and OPT are optimal for a two-level memory hierarchy. The comp...
A limit to computer system performance is the miss penalty for fetching data and instructions from l...
The recent advancement in the field of distributed computing depicts a need of developing highly ass...
This paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREW-PRAM. Th...
This paper 1 describes our experience using the stack pro-cessing algorithm [6] for estimating the n...
Cache management has become one of the most popular areas of research in improving the performance o...
AbstractThis paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREWP...
Classic cache replacement policies assume that miss costs are uniform. However, the correlation betw...
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xp...
A priority queue $Q$ is a data structure that maintains a collection of elements, each element havin...
Caching techniques have been used to improve the performance gap of storage hierarchies in computing...
This paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREWPRAM. The...
Modern processors use high-performance cache replacement policies that outperform traditional altern...
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xp...
The concept of stack distance, applicable to the important class of inclusion replacement policies f...
The replacement policies known as MIN and OPT are optimal for a two-level memory hierarchy. The comp...
A limit to computer system performance is the miss penalty for fetching data and instructions from l...
The recent advancement in the field of distributed computing depicts a need of developing highly ass...
This paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREW-PRAM. Th...
This paper 1 describes our experience using the stack pro-cessing algorithm [6] for estimating the n...
Cache management has become one of the most popular areas of research in improving the performance o...
AbstractThis paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREWP...
Classic cache replacement policies assume that miss costs are uniform. However, the correlation betw...
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xp...
A priority queue $Q$ is a data structure that maintains a collection of elements, each element havin...
Caching techniques have been used to improve the performance gap of storage hierarchies in computing...
This paper presents parallel algorithms for priority queue operations on a p-processor EREWPRAM. The...
Modern processors use high-performance cache replacement policies that outperform traditional altern...
The full text of this article is not available on SOAR. WSU users can access the article via IEEE Xp...