13,425 research outputs found
Parallel discrete event simulation: A shared memory approach
With traditional event list techniques, evaluating a detailed discrete event simulation model can often require hours or even days of computation time. Parallel simulation mimics the interacting servers and queues of a real system by assigning each simulated entity to a processor. By eliminating the event list and maintaining only sufficient synchronization to insure causality, parallel simulation can potentially provide speedups that are linear in the number of processors. A set of shared memory experiments is presented using the Chandy-Misra distributed simulation algorithm to simulate networks of queues. Parameters include queueing network topology and routing probabilities, number of processors, and assignment of network nodes to processors. These experiments show that Chandy-Misra distributed simulation is a questionable alternative to sequential simulation of most queueing network models
Resolving economic deadlock
In the introductory chapter a novel economic policy is proposed which consists of a) 'virtualizing' debt (putting it on the Central Bank balance sheet) and b) reduce the money-multiplier by an implementation of a strong minimum reserving policy. The main part shows exposes a flaw in the concept of capital in neoclassical thinking, with special reference to Tobin's q-theory. This has the implication that neoclassical thinking - Keynesian and 'classical' - overstates investment activity and the tendency to full employment. The last two chapters - on China and the Nazi-Recovery - are empirical illustrations.Keynesianism; deficit spending; public debt; capital theory; monetary theory and policy;
Investigation of the applicability of a functional programming model to fault-tolerant parallel processing for knowledge-based systems
In a fault-tolerant parallel computer, a functional programming model can facilitate distributed checkpointing, error recovery, load balancing, and graceful degradation. Such a model has been implemented on the Draper Fault-Tolerant Parallel Processor (FTPP). When used in conjunction with the FTPP's fault detection and masking capabilities, this implementation results in a graceful degradation of system performance after faults. Three graceful degradation algorithms have been implemented and are presented. A user interface has been implemented which requires minimal cognitive overhead by the application programmer, masking such complexities as the system's redundancy, distributed nature, variable complement of processing resources, load balancing, fault occurrence and recovery. This user interface is described and its use demonstrated. The applicability of the functional programming style to the Activation Framework, a paradigm for intelligent systems, is then briefly described
C-MOS array design techniques: SUMC multiprocessor system study
The current capabilities of LSI techniques for speed and reliability, plus the possibilities of assembling large configurations of LSI logic and storage elements, have demanded the study of multiprocessors and multiprocessing techniques, problems, and potentialities. Evaluated are three previous systems studies for a space ultrareliable modular computer multiprocessing system, and a new multiprocessing system is proposed that is flexibly configured with up to four central processors, four 1/0 processors, and 16 main memory units, plus auxiliary memory and peripheral devices. This multiprocessor system features a multilevel interrupt, qualified S/360 compatibility for ground-based generation of programs, virtual memory management of a storage hierarchy through 1/0 processors, and multiport access to multiple and shared memory units
The impacts of timing constraints on virtual channels multiplexing in interconnect networks
Interconnect networks employing wormhole-switching play a critical role in shared memory multiprocessor systems-on-chip (MPSoC) designs, multicomputer systems and system area networks. Virtual channels greatly improve the performance of wormhole-switched networks because they reduce blocking by acting as "bypass" lanes for non-blocked messages. Capturing the effects of virtual channel multiplexing has always been a crucial issue for any analytical model proposed for wormhole-switched networks. Dally has developed a model to investigate the behaviour of this multiplexing which have been widely employed in the subsequent analytical models of most routing algorithms suggested in the literature. It is indispensable to modify Dally's model in order to evaluate the performance of channel multiplexing in more general networks where restrictions such as timing constraints of input arrivals and finite buffer size of queues are common. In this paper we consider timing constraints of input arrivals to investigate the virtual channel multiplexing problem inherent in most current networks. The analysis that we propose is completely general and therefore can be used with any interconnect networks employing virtual channels. The validity of the proposed equations has been verified through simulation experiments under different working conditions
Embedded dynamic programming networks for networks-on-chip
PhD ThesisRelentless technology downscaling and recent technological advancements
in three dimensional integrated circuit (3D-IC) provide a promising
prospect to realize heterogeneous system-on-chip (SoC) and homogeneous
chip multiprocessor (CMP) based on the networks-onchip
(NoCs) paradigm with augmented scalability, modularity and
performance. In many cases in such systems, scheduling and managing
communication resources are the major design and implementation
challenges instead of the computing resources. Past research
efforts were mainly focused on complex design-time or simple heuristic
run-time approaches to deal with the on-chip network resource
management with only local or partial information about the network.
This could yield poor communication resource utilizations and amortize
the benefits of the emerging technologies and design methods.
Thus, the provision for efficient run-time resource management in
large-scale on-chip systems becomes critical. This thesis proposes a
design methodology for a novel run-time resource management infrastructure
that can be realized efficiently using a distributed architecture,
which closely couples with the distributed NoC infrastructure. The
proposed infrastructure exploits the global information and status
of the network to optimize and manage the on-chip communication
resources at run-time.
There are four major contributions in this thesis. First, it presents a
novel deadlock detection method that utilizes run-time transitive closure
(TC) computation to discover the existence of deadlock-equivalence
sets, which imply loops of requests in NoCs. This detection scheme,
TC-network, guarantees the discovery of all true-deadlocks without
false alarms in contrast to state-of-the-art approximation and heuristic
approaches. Second, it investigates the advantages of implementing
future on-chip systems using three dimensional (3D) integration and
presents the design, fabrication and testing results of a TC-network
implemented in a fully stacked three-layer 3D architecture using a
through-silicon via (TSV) complementary metal-oxide semiconductor
(CMOS) technology. Testing results demonstrate the effectiveness
of such a TC-network for deadlock detection with minimal computational
delay in a large-scale network. Third, it introduces an adaptive
strategy to effectively diffuse heat throughout the three dimensional
network-on-chip (3D-NoC) geometry. This strategy employs a dynamic
programming technique to select and optimize the direction of data
manoeuvre in NoC. It leads to a tool, which is based on the accurate
HotSpot thermal model and SystemC cycle accurate model, to simulate
the thermal system and evaluate the proposed approach. Fourth, it
presents a new dynamic programming-based run-time thermal management
(DPRTM) system, including reactive and proactive schemes, to
effectively diffuse heat throughout NoC-based CMPs by routing packets
through the coolest paths, when the temperature does not exceed
chip’s thermal limit. When the thermal limit is exceeded, throttling is
employed to mitigate heat in the chip and DPRTM changes its course
to avoid throttled paths and to minimize the impact of throttling on
chip performance.
This thesis enables a new avenue to explore a novel run-time resource
management infrastructure for NoCs, in which new methodologies
and concepts are proposed to enhance the on-chip networks for
future large-scale 3D integration.Iraqi Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MOHESR)
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