772 research outputs found
Modeling and Analysis of Fault Tolerant Multistage Interconnection Networks
Performance and reliability are two of the most crucial issues in today\u27s high-performance instrumentation and measurement systems. High speed and compact density multistage interconnection networks (MINs) are widely-used subsystems in different applications. New performance models are proposed to evaluate a novel fault tolerant MIN arrangement, thereby assuring performance and reliability with high confidence level. A concurrent fault detection and recovery scheme for MINs is considered by rerouting over redundant interconnection links under stringent real-time constraints for digital instrumentation as sensor networks. A switch architecture for concurrent testing and diagnosis is proposed. New performance models are developed and used to evaluate the compound effect of fault tolerant operation (inclusive of testing, diagnosis, and recovery) on the overall throughput and delay. Results are shown for single transient and permanent stuck-at faults on links and storage units in the switching elements. It is shown that performance degradation due to fault tolerance is graceful while performance degradation without fault recovery is unacceptable
Tolerating multiple faults in multistage interconnection networks with minimal extra stages
Adams and Siegel (1982) proposed an extra stage cube interconnection network that tolerates one switch failure with one extra stage. We extend their results and discover a class of extra stage interconnection networks that tolerate multiple switch failures with a minimal number of extra stages. Adopting the same fault model as Adams and Siegel, the faulty switches can be bypassed by a pair of demultiplexer/multiplexer combinations. It is easy to show that, to maintain point to point and broadcast connectivities, there must be at least S extra stages to tolerate I switch failures. We present the first known construction of an extra stage interconnection network that meets this lower-bound. This 12-dimensional multistage interconnection network has n+f stages and tolerates I switch failures. An n-bit label called mask is used for each stage that indicates the bit differences between the two inputs coming into a common switch. We designed the fault-tolerant construction such that it repeatedly uses the singleton basis of the n-dimensional vector space as the stage mask vectors. This construction is further generalized and we prove that an n-dimensional multistage interconnection network is optimally fault-tolerant if and only if the mask vectors of every n consecutive stages span the n-dimensional vector space
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Indirect interconnection networks for high performance routers/switches
Routers form the backbone of the Internet; their kernel, structure, andconfiguration (scheduler) of the backplane (or switching fabrics) dominate the routersâperformance, scalability, reliability and cost. As higher performance is required with therapid development of the network applications, routerâs architecture has also evolvedfrom the shared backplane to switched backplane, which mainly uses the indirectinterconnection networks.The indirect interconnection networks include crossbar, MIN (multistageinterconnection networks) and some other irregular topologies. At present, most oftodayâs routers and switches are implemented on single crossbar with symmetric bufferarchitecture. In the first part of this dissertation, we introduce novel asymmetric bufferarchitecture for the crossbar in which a new port and a local shared bus are added. Wethen evaluate its performance and simulate under different bus arbitration and buffermanagement algorithms. Our studies indicate that we can get great improvement for thethroughput and low drop rate. Thus we could save a lot of expensive link bandwidth anddecrease the probability of congestion for the network.Single crossbar complexity increases at O(N2) in terms of crosspoint number,which become unacceptable for scalability as the port number (N) increases. A delta classself-routing MIN with complexity of O(NĂlog2N) has been widely used in the ATMswitches. But the reduction of crosspoint number results in considerable internal blocking.A number of scalable methods have been proposed to solve this problem. One of themuses more stages with recirculation architecture to reroute the deflected packets, whichgreatly increase the latency. In the second part of this dissertation, we propose aninterleaved multistage switching fabrics architecture and assess its throughput with ananalytical model and simulations. We compare this novel scheme with some previousparallel architectures and show its benefits. From extensive simulations under differenttraffic patterns and fault models, our interleaved architecture achieves better performancethan its counterpart of single panel fabric. Our interleaved scheme achieves speedups(over the single panel fabric) of 3.4 and 2.25 under uniform and hot-spot traffic patterns,respectively at maximum load (p=1). Moreover, the interleaved fabrics show greattolerance against internal hardware failures
Reconfiguration for Fault Tolerance and Performance Analysis
Architecture reconfiguration, the ability of a system to alter the active interconnection among modules, has a history of different purposes and strategies. Its purposes develop from the relatively simple desire to formalize procedures that all processes have in common to reconfiguration for the improvement of fault-tolerance, to reconfiguration for performance enhancement, either through the simple maximizing of system use or by sophisticated notions of wedding topology to the specific needs of a given process.
Strategies range from straightforward redundancy by means of an identical backup system to intricate structures employing multistage interconnection networks. The present discussion surveys the more important contributions to developments in reconfigurable architecture. The strategy here is in a sense to approach the field from an historical perspective, with the goal of developing a more coherent theory of reconfiguration. First, the Turing and von Neumann machines are discussed from the perspective of system reconfiguration, and it is seen that this early important theoretical work contains little that anticipates reconfiguration. Then some early developments in reconfiguration are analyzed, including the work of Estrin and associates on the fixed plus variable restructurable computer system, the attempt to theorize about configurable computers by Miller and Cocke, and the work of Reddi and Feustel on their restructable computer system.
The discussion then focuses on the most sustained systems for fault tolerance and performance enhancement that have been proposed. An attempt will be made to define fault tolerance and to investigate some of the strategies used to achieve it. By investigating four different systems, the Tandern computer, the C.vmp system, the Extra Stage Cube, and the Gamma network, the move from dynamic redundancy to reconfiguration is observed. Then reconfiguration for performance enhancement is discussed. A survey of some proposals is attempted, then the discussion focuses on the most sustained systems that have been proposed: PASM, the DC architecture, the Star local network, and the NYU Ultracomputer. The discussion is organized around a comparison of control, scheduling, communication, and network topology.
Finally, comparisons are drawn between fault tolerance and performance enhancement, in order to clarify the notion of reconfiguration and to reveal the common ground of fault tolerance and performance enhancement as well as the areas in which they diverge. An attempt is made in the conclusion to derive from this survey and analysis some observations on the nature of reconfiguration, as well as some remarks on necessary further areas of research
A systematic approach to reliable multistage interconnection network design
Bibliography: p. 34-35.Army Research Office grant no. DAAG29-84-K-0005 Advanced Research Projects Agency monitored by ONR, contract N00014-81-K-0742C.-C. Jay Kuo
A Switch Architecture for Real-Time Multimedia Communications
In this paper we present a switch that can be used to transfer multimedia type of trafJic. The switch provides a guaranteed throughput and a bounded latency. We focus on the design of a prototype Switching Element using the new technology opportunities being offered today. The architecture meets the multimedia requirements but still has a low complexity and needs a minimum amount of hardware. A main item of this paper will be the background of the architectural design decisions made. These include the interconnection topology, buffer organization, routing and scheduling. The implementation of the switching fabric with FPGAs, allows us to experiment with switching mode, routing strategy and scheduling policy in a multimedia environment. The witching elements are interconnected in a Kautz topology. Kautz graphs have interesting properties such as: a small diametec the degree is independent of the network size, the network is fault-tolerant and has a simple routing algorithm
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