• DocumentCode
    2414173
  • Title

    High performance communication using a commodity network for cluster systems

  • Author

    Sumimoto, Shinji ; Tezuka, Hiroshi ; Hori, Atsushi ; Harada, Hiroshi ; Takahashi, Toshiyuki ; Ishikawa, Yutaka

  • Author_Institution
    Real World Comput. Partnership, Ibaraki, Japan
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    2000
  • Firstpage
    139
  • Lastpage
    146
  • Abstract
    Proposes a scheme to realize a high-performance communication facility using a commodity network. This scheme does not require any special hardware or hardware-specific device drivers in order to adapt to many kinds of network interface cards (NICs). In this scheme, a reliable lightweight network protocol is handled directly on a data link layer called by a network device driver. An interrupt reaping technique is proposed to eliminate the hardware interrupt overhead when an application waits for a message. PM/Ethernet, an instance of the scheme, is implemented on Linux with minimal modification to the Linux kernel, and existing network device drivers are used without any modification. Using Pentium III 500-MHz PCs on Packet Engine´s G-NIC II Gigabit Ethernet NIC, it achieves 77.5 MB/s bandwidth and 37.6 μs round-trip time latency compared to that of TCP/IP, which achieves 46.7 MB/s bandwidth and 89.6 μs round-trip time latency. The NAS parallel benchmark IS results show that MPI on PM/Ethernet achieves 75% better performance than MPI on TCP/IP and is 7.8% slower than that of MPI on Myrinet PM
  • Keywords
    data communication; device drivers; interrupts; local area networks; microcomputer applications; network operating systems; performance evaluation; transport protocols; workstation clusters; 37.6 mus; 46.7 MB/s; 500 MHz; 77.5 MB/s; 89.6 mus; Gigabit Ethernet; Linux kernel; MPI; Myrinet PM; NAS parallel benchmark IS results; PM/Ethernet; Packet Engine G-NIC II; Pentium III personal computers; TCP/IP; application message waiting; bandwidth; cluster systems; commodity network; data link layer; hardware interrupt overhead; high-performance communication facility; interrupt reaping technique; network device driver; network interface cards; performance; reliable lightweight network protocol; round-trip time latency; Bandwidth; Delay; Ethernet networks; Hardware; Kernel; Linux; Network interfaces; Protocols; TCPIP; Telecommunication network reliability;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    High-Performance Distributed Computing, 2000. Proceedings. The Ninth International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
  • ISSN
    1082-8907
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-0783-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HPDC.2000.868644
  • Filename
    868644