Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
The emergence of video streaming applications, together with the users’ demand for high-resolution contents, has led to the development of new video coding standards, such as High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). HEVC provides high efficiency at the cost of increased complexity. This higher computational burden results in increased power consumption in current multicore servers. To tackle this challenge, algorithmic optimizations need to be accompanied by content-aware application-level strategies, able to reduce power while meeting compression and quality requirements. In this paper, we propose a machine learning-based power and thermal management approach that dynamically learns and selects the best encoding configuration and operating frequency for each of the videos running on multicore servers, by using information from frame compression, quality, encoding time, power, and temperature. In addition, we present a resolution-aware video assignment and migration strategy that reduces the peak and average temperature of the chip while maintaining the desirable encoding time. We implemented our approach in an enterprise multicore server and evaluated it under several common scenarios for video providers. On average, compared to a state-of-the-art technique, for the most realistic scenario, our approach improves BD-PSNR and BD-rate by 0.54 dB, and 8%, respectively, and reduces the encoding time, power consumption, and average temperature by 15.3%, 13%, and 10%, respectively. Moreover, our proposed approach increases BD-PSNR and BD-rate compared to the HEVC Test Model (HM), by 1.19 dB and 24%, respectively, without any encoding time degradation, when power and temperature constraints are relaxed.
Touradj Ebrahimi, Michela Testolina, Davi Nachtigall Lazzarotto, Vlad Hosu
Touradj Ebrahimi, Michela Testolina