DocumentCode :
402685
Title :
Performance on a bandwidth constrained network: How much bandwidth do we need?
Author :
Boothe, Bob ; Ranade, Abhiram
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southern Maine, Portland, ME, USA
fYear :
1993
fDate :
15-19 Nov. 1993
Firstpage :
906
Lastpage :
915
Abstract :
The authors approach network design from the perspective of the applications and ask how much network is needed. They answer this question, in the context of shared memory multiprocessors, for four scientific applications. They simulate their executions under infinite bandwidth assumptions and collect profiles of their varying bandwidth needs. These profiles are then fed into a performance model of how bursty traffic squeezes through a bandwidth constrained network. The results suggest that networks should provide a remote memory bandwidth of 2-4 bits/operation and memory module bandwidths of 8-16 bits/op. The higher memory module bandwidth is needed because of hot spots in the traffic patterns. Further simulations show that these hot spots arise primarily because or randomness and not because of multiple accesses to a single location. Thus, combining techniques will not eliminate hot spots from these applications.
Keywords :
performance evaluation; shared memory systems; bandwidth constrained network; bursty traffic; hot spots; infinite bandwidth assumptions; network design; performance model; scientific applications; shared memory multiprocessors; traffic patterns; Application software; Bandwidth; Computer science; Costs; Hardware; Hypercubes; Parallel machines; Programming profession; Routing; Traffic control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Supercomputing '93. Proceedings
ISSN :
1063-9535
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-4340-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SUPERC.1993.1263549
Filename :
1263549
Link To Document :
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