Chapter 6: Joshua Mohundro, Patrick Wong

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Sectored Cache

Hard section

Victim Cache

The Victim Cache, in architectures with them, stores just-evicted lines from another level of cache. This cache is usually highly associative and has very few entries, but solves one of the pathological cases for direct-mapped caches, the alternating memory access pattern (of which a cache line conflict occurs). In effect, this extends the associativity of would-be conflict misses by the number of entries in the victim cache for very low cost.

Architectures implementing victim cache for x86 include the Transmeta Efficeon, AMD K7, AMD K8, and finally the AMD K10.

AMD has traditionally implemented an exclusive cache hierarchy, a form of cache that avoids duplication of data. Therefore, a victim cache is a natural development from implementation of an exclusive cache.

In K7, the cache is on a very slow external bus. The victim cache acted as a buffer between evicted lines from L1 cache, and slow L2 cache.

The K10's "victim cache" deserves some more inspection, as it is 2-6 MB, an order of magnitude larger than most victim cache implementations. It is more of a buffer for efficient implementation of AMD's exclusive cache hierarchy. It is possible that AMD decided that the L3 cache was fast enough to act as a victim cache.

Look into: non-x86 victim caches, herp

Actual *implications* of victim caches for inclusive vs. exclusive cache hierarchies... yep