309 research outputs found

    Toward an optimal foundation architecture for optoelectronic computing .1. Regularly interconnected device planes

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    Cataloged from PDF version of article.By systematically examining the tree of possibilities for optoelectronic computing architectures and offering arguments that allow one to prune suboptimal branches of this tree, I come to the conclusion that electronic circuit planes interconnected optically according to regular connection patterns represent an alternative that is reasonably close to the best possible, as defined by physical limitations. Thus I propose that this foundation architecture should provide a basis for future research and development in this area. © 1997 Optical Society of Americ

    Efficient Intra-Rack Resource Disaggregation for HPC Using Co-Packaged DWDM Photonics

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    The diversity of workload requirements and increasing hardware heterogeneity in emerging high performance computing (HPC) systems motivate resource disaggregation. Resource disaggregation allows compute and memory resources to be allocated individually as required to each workload. However, it is unclear how to efficiently realize this capability and cost-effectively meet the stringent bandwidth and latency requirements of HPC applications. To that end, we describe how modern photonics can be co-designed with modern HPC racks to implement flexible intra-rack resource disaggregation and fully meet the bit error rate (BER) and high escape bandwidth of all chip types in modern HPC racks. Our photonic-based disaggregated rack provides an average application speedup of 11% (46% maximum) for 25 CPU and 61% for 24 GPU benchmarks compared to a similar system that instead uses modern electronic switches for disaggregation. Using observed resource usage from a production system, we estimate that an iso-performance intra-rack disaggregated HPC system using photonics would require 4x fewer memory modules and 2x fewer NICs than a non-disaggregated baseline.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Published in IEEE Cluster 202

    Photonic Interconnection Networks for Applications in Heterogeneous Utility Computing Systems

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    Growing demands in heterogeneous utility computing systems in future cloud and high performance computing systems are driving the development of processor-hardware accelerator interconnects with greater performance, flexibility, and dynamism. Recent innovations in the field of utility computing have led to an emergence in the use of heterogeneous compute elements. By leveraging the computing advantages of hardware accelerators alongside typical general purpose processors, performance efficiency can be maximized. The network linking these compute nodes is increasingly becoming the bottleneck in these architectures, limiting the hardware accelerators to be restricted to localized computing. A high-bandwidth, agile interconnect is an imperative enabler for hardware accelerator delocalization in heterogeneous utility computing. A redesign of these systems' interconnect and architecture will be essential to establishing high-bandwidth, low-latency, efficient, and dynamic heterogeneous systems that can meet the challenges of next-generation utility computing. By leveraging an optics-based approach, this dissertation presents the design and implementation of optically-connected hardware accelerators (OCHA) that exploit the distance-independent energy dissipation and bandwidth density of photonic transceivers, in combination with the flexibility, efficiency and data parallelization offered by optical networks. By replacing the electronic buses with an optical interconnection network, architectures that delocalize hardware accelerators can be created that are otherwise infeasible. With delocalized optically-connected hardware accelerator nodes accessible by processors at run time, the system can alleviate the network latency issues plague current heterogeneous systems. Accelerators that would otherwise sit idle, waiting for it's master CPU to feed it data, can instead operate at high utilization rates, leading to dramatic improvements in overall system performance. This work presents a prototype optically-connect hardware accelerator module and custom optical-network-aware, dynamic hardware accelerator allocator that communicate transparently and optically across an optical interconnection network. The hardware accelerators and processor are optimized to enable hardware acceleration across an optical network using fast packet-switching. The versatility of the optical network enables additional performance benefits including optical multicasting to exploit the data parallelism found in many accelerated data sets. The integration of hardware acceleration, heterogeneous computing, and optics constitutes a critical step for both computing and optics. The massive data parallelism, application dependent-location and function, as well as network latency, and bandwidth limitations facing networks today complement well with the strength of optical communications-based systems. Moreover, ongoing efforts focusing on development of low-cost optical components and subsystems that are suitable for computing environment may benefit from the high-volume heterogeneous computing market. This work, therefore, takes the first steps in merging the areas of hardware acceleration and optics by developing architectures, protocols, and systems to interface with the two technologies and demonstrating areas of potential benefits and areas for future work. Next-generation heterogeneous utility computing systems will indubitably benefit from the use of efficient, flexible and high-performance optically connect hardware acceleration

    The Design of a System Architecture for Mobile Multimedia Computers

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    This chapter discusses the system architecture of a portable computer, called Mobile Digital Companion, which provides support for handling multimedia applications energy efficiently. Because battery life is limited and battery weight is an important factor for the size and the weight of the Mobile Digital Companion, energy management plays a crucial role in the architecture. As the Companion must remain usable in a variety of environments, it has to be flexible and adaptable to various operating conditions. The Mobile Digital Companion has an unconventional architecture that saves energy by using system decomposition at different levels of the architecture and exploits locality of reference with dedicated, optimised modules. The approach is based on dedicated functionality and the extensive use of energy reduction techniques at all levels of system design. The system has an architecture with a general-purpose processor accompanied by a set of heterogeneous autonomous programmable modules, each providing an energy efficient implementation of dedicated tasks. A reconfigurable internal communication network switch exploits locality of reference and eliminates wasteful data copies
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