3 research outputs found
OutFlank Routing: Increasing Throughput in Toroidal Interconnection Networks
We present a new, deadlock-free, routing scheme for toroidal interconnection
networks, called OutFlank Routing (OFR). OFR is an adaptive strategy which
exploits non-minimal links, both in the source and in the destination nodes.
When minimal links are congested, OFR deroutes packets to carefully chosen
intermediate destinations, in order to obtain travel paths which are only an
additive constant longer than the shortest ones. Since routing performance is
very sensitive to changes in the traffic model or in the router parameters, an
accurate discrete-event simulator of the toroidal network has been developed to
empirically validate OFR, by comparing it against other relevant routing
strategies, over a range of typical real-world traffic patterns. On the
16x16x16 (4096 nodes) simulated network OFR exhibits improvements of the
maximum sustained throughput between 14% and 114%, with respect to Adaptive
Bubble Routing.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to be presented at ICPADS 201
An Efficient Routing Algorithm for Mesh-Hypercube (M-H) Networks
Proceedings of the International Conference on Parallel and Distributed Processing
Techniques and Applications (PDPTA'08, ISBN Set # 1-60132-084-1),
Editors: Hamid R. Arabnia and Youngsong Mun, 2008.This paper presents an efficient routing algorithm for the Mesh-Hypercube (M-H) network. The M-H network is one of the new interconnection networking techniques use to build high performance parallel computers. The combination of M-H networks offers high connectivity among multiple nodes, fault-tolerance, and load scalability. However, the performance of M-H networks may degrade significantly in the presence of frequent link or node failures. When a link or node failure occurs, neither the hardware schemes nor point to point and multistage routing algorithms can be used without adding extra links. This paper presents an efficient single bit store and forward (SBSF) routing algorithm for MH network that based on the round robin scheduling algorithm. Simulation and numerical results suggest that the proposed routing algorithm improves the overall performance of M-H network by both reducing the transmission delay and increasing the total data throughput even in the presence of faulty nodes.http://www.world-academy-of-science.org
A Lower Bound for Nearly Minimal Adaptive and Hot Potato Algorithms
Recently, Chinn, Leighton, and Tompa [10] presented lower bounds for store-and-forward permutation routing algorithms on the n × n mesh with bounded buffer size and where a packet must take a shortest (or minimal) path to its destination. We extend their analysis to algorithms that are nearly minimal. We also apply this technique to the domain of hot potato algorithms, where there is no storage of packets and the shortest path to a destination is not assumed (and is in general impossible). We show that "natural" variants and "improvements" of several algorithms in the literature perform poorly in the worst case. As a result, we identify algorithmic features that are undesirable for worst case hot potato permutation routing. Recent works in hot potato routing have tried to define simple and greedy classes of algorithms. We show that when an algorithm is too simple and too greedy, its performance in routing permutations is poor in the worst case. Specifically, the technique of [10] ..