Fault Tolerant Computer Architecture: Self-Repair
Sorin, Daniel J.
2009-01-01 00:00:00
[In Chapter 4, we discussed how to diagnose permanent faults. Diagnosis, by itself, is not useful, though. Diagnosis is useful when it is combined with the ability of a processor to repair itself. In this chapter, we discuss some of the many ways in which a processor can perform self-repair. The unifying theme to all self-repair schemes is that they require physical redundancy. Without physical redundancy, no self-repair is possible.]
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[In Chapter 4, we discussed how to diagnose permanent faults. Diagnosis, by itself, is not useful, though. Diagnosis is useful when it is combined with the ability of a processor to repair itself. In this chapter, we discuss some of the many ways in which a processor can perform self-repair. The unifying theme to all self-repair schemes is that they require physical redundancy. Without physical redundancy, no self-repair is possible.]
Published: Jan 1, 2009
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