712 research outputs found

    Performance evaluation of Fast Ethernet, ATM and Myrinet under PVM

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    Congestion in network switches can limit the communication traffic between Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM) nodes in a parallel computation. The research introduces a new benchmark to evaluate the performance of PVM in various networking environments. The benchmark is used to achieve a better understanding of performance limitations in parallel computing that are imposed by the choice of the network. The networks considered here are Fast Ethernet, Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) OC-3c (155Mb/s) and Myrinet. Together, they represent an interesting range of alternatives for parallel cluster computing. A characterization of network delays and throughput and a comparison of the expected costs of the three environments are developed to provide a basis for an informed decision on the networking methods and topology for a parallel database that is being considered for FBI\u27s National DNA Indexing System (NDIS)[17]. This network is used for communications among the nodes of the parallel machine; thus the security requirements defined for the FBI\u27s Criminal Justice Information Services Division Wide Area Network (CJIS-WAN) [12] are not a concern

    The American University in the Digital Age (2.1)

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    Second International Conference on Asynchronous Learning Networkshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89414/1/1996_Sloan_Talk_2.1.pd

    Reflections on Active Networking

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    Interactions among telecommunications networks, computers, and other peripheral devices have been of interest since the earliest distributed computing systems. A key architectural question is the location (and nature) of programmability. One perspective, that examined in this paper, is that network elements should be as programmable as possible, in order to build the most flexible distributed computing systems. This paper presents my personal view of the history of programmable networking over the last two decades, and in the spirit of vox audita perit, littera scripta manet , includes an account of how what is now called Active Networking came into being. It demonstrates the deep roots Active Networking has in the programming languages, networking and operating systems communities, and shows how interdisciplinary approaches can have impacts greater than the sums of their parts. Lessons are drawn both from the broader research agenda, and the specific goals pursued in the SwitchWare project. I close by speculating on possible futures for Active Networking

    Scholarly Communication and the Internet

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    Information technologies of the 20th century have affected the process of scholarly communication. They have not only changed the way in which two scholars interact with each other but also the nature of contributions of others like publishers, booksellers and research libraries. Internet offers a variety of services, which can help achieve communication in an efficient and effective manner. This paper tries to trace the evolution of Internet from the perspective of scholarly communication

    The American University in the Digital Age

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    Second International Conference on Asynchronous Learning Networkshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89411/1/1996_Sloan_Talk.pd

    USRA/RIACS

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    The Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science (RIACS) was established by the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) at the NASA Ames Research Center (ARC) on 6 June 1983. RIACS is privately operated by USRA, a consortium of universities with research programs in the aerospace sciences, under a cooperative agreement with NASA. The primary mission of RIACS is to provide research and expertise in computer science and scientific computing to support the scientific missions of NASA ARC. The research carried out at RIACS must change its emphasis from year to year in response to NASA ARC's changing needs and technological opportunities. A flexible scientific staff is provided through a university faculty visitor program, a post doctoral program, and a student visitor program. Not only does this provide appropriate expertise but it also introduces scientists outside of NASA to NASA problems. A small group of core RIACS staff provides continuity and interacts with an ARC technical monitor and scientific advisory group to determine the RIACS mission. RIACS activities are reviewed and monitored by a USRA advisory council and ARC technical monitor. Research at RIACS is currently being done in the following areas: Parallel Computing; Advanced Methods for Scientific Computing; Learning Systems; High Performance Networks and Technology; Graphics, Visualization, and Virtual Environments

    The Use of Firewalls in an Academic Environment

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    Commodity single board computer clusters and their applications

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    © 2018 Current commodity Single Board Computers (SBCs) are sufficiently powerful to run mainstream operating systems and workloads. Many of these boards may be linked together, to create small, low-cost clusters that replicate some features of large data center clusters. The Raspberry Pi Foundation produces a series of SBCs with a price/performance ratio that makes SBC clusters viable, perhaps even expendable. These clusters are an enabler for Edge/Fog Compute, where processing is pushed out towards data sources, reducing bandwidth requirements and decentralizing the architecture. In this paper we investigate use cases driving the growth of SBC clusters, we examine the trends in future hardware developments, and discuss the potential of SBC clusters as a disruptive technology. Compared to traditional clusters, SBC clusters have a reduced footprint, are low-cost, and have low power requirements. This enables different models of deployment—particularly outside traditional data center environments. We discuss the applicability of existing software and management infrastructure to support exotic deployment scenarios and anticipate the next generation of SBC. We conclude that the SBC cluster is a new and distinct computational deployment paradigm, which is applicable to a wider range of scenarios than current clusters. It facilitates Internet of Things and Smart City systems and is potentially a game changer in pushing application logic out towards the network edge
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