54 research outputs found

    S-SMART++: A Low-Latency NoC Leveraging Speculative Bypass Requests

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    Many-core processors demand scalable, efficient and low latency NoCs. Bypass routers are an affordable solution to attain low latency in relatively simple topologies like the mesh. SMART improves on traditional bypass routers implementing multi-hop bypass which reduces the importance of the distance between pairs of nodes. Nevertheless, the conservative buffer reallocation policy of SMART requires a large number of Virtual Channels (VCs) to offer high performance, penalizing its implementation cost. Besides, SMART zero-load latency values highly depend on HPC Max HPCMax, the maximum number of hops that can be jumped per cycle. In this article, we present Speculative-SMART++ (S-SMART++), with two mechanisms that significantly improve multi-hop bypass. First, zero-load latency is reduced by speculatively setting consecutive multi-hops. Second, the inefficient buffer reallocation policy of SMART is reduced by combining multi-packet buffers, Non-Empty Buffer Bypass and per-packet allocation. These proposals are evaluated using functional simulation, with synthetic and real loads, and synthesis tools. S-SMART++ does not need VCs to obtain the performance of SMART with 8 VCs, reducing notably logic resources and dynamic power. Additionally, S-SMART++ reduces the base-latency of SMART by at least 29.2 percent, even when using the biggest HPC Max HPCMax possibleThis work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, FPI grant BES2017-079971, the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under contracts TIN2016-76635-C2-2-R (AEI/FEDER, UE) and TIC PID2019-105660RB-C22, and the European HiPEAC Network of Excellence. The Mont-Blanc project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 671697

    SynFull-RTL: evaluation methodology for RTL NoC designs

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    SynFull is a widely employed tool that generates realistic traffic patterns for the performance evaluation of a NoC. In this work, we identify the main limitations of SynFull: high variability and long simulation time and also that these limitations increase when SynFull is integrated with RTL designs. SynFull-RTL employs a statistical approach, simulating each application macro-phase only once and averaging according to its probability of occurrence and the measured traffic load. SynFull-RTL obtains higher accuracy than the original version and reduced variability, with observed 40× reduction in simulation time and resources. A use-case with ProSMART validates the results.This work has been supported by the Spanish Science and Technology Commission under contract PID2019-105660RB-C22 and the European HiPEAC Network of Excellence. Enrique Vallejo has been partially supported by the Ministry of Universities, Subprograma Estatal de Movilidad, grant number PRX21/00757. This work also received funding from the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreements number 826647 (EPI) and 946002 (MEEP).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Peripheral twists for torus topologies with arbitrary aspect ratio

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    A torus is a common topology used in supercomputer networks. Asymmetric Tori suffer from resource usage imbalance, which translates to reduced performance. Twisted Tori employ a twist in the peripheral links of one or more dimensions to improve the topological parameters and overall performance of asymmetric networks. 2D and 3D twisted tori with aspect ratios 2:1 and 2:1:1 have been studied in detail. However, commercial machines do not necessarily employ those aspects ratios. In this work we present an early study of the effect of peripheral link twisting in multidimensional twisted tori with arbitrary aspect ratios. We observe that, in the general case, it is impossible to find a specific twist that minimizes all the interesting topological parameters of the network. We also introduce a requirement for the use of several twists in multidimensional torus with adaptive routing.Postprint (author’s final draft

    Throughput Unfairness in Dragonfly Networks under Realistic Traffic Patterns

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    Dragonfly networks have a two-level hierarchical arrangement of the network routers, and allow for a competitive cost-performance solution in large systems. Nonminimal adaptive routing is employed to fully exploit the path diversity and increase the performance under adversarial traffic patterns. Throughput unfairness prevents a balanced use of the resources across the network nodes and degrades severely the performance of any application running on an affected node. Previous works have demonstrated the presence of throughput unfairness in Dragonflies under certain adversarial traffic patterns, and proposed different alternatives to effectively combat such effect. In this paper we introduce a new traffic pattern denoted adversarial consecutive (ADVc), which portrays a real use case, and evaluate its impact on network performance and throughput fairness. This traffic pattern is the most adversarial in terms of network fairness. Our evaluations, both with or without transit-over-injection priority, show that global misrouting policies do not properly alleviate this problem. Therefore, explicit fairness mechanisms are required for these networks

    Contention-based Nonminimal Adaptive Routing in High-radix Networks

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    Adaptive routing is an efficient congestion avoidance mechanism for modern Datacenter and HPC networks. Congestion detection traditionally relies on the occupancy of the router queues. However, this approach can hinder performance due to coarse-grain measurements with small buffers, and potential routing oscillations with large buffers. We introduce an alternative mechanism, labelled Contention-Based Adaptive Routing. Our mechanism adapts routing based on an estimation of “network contention”, the simultaneity of traffic flows contending for a network port. Our system employs a set of counters which track the demand for each output port. This exploits path diversity thanks to earlier detection of adversarial traffic patterns, and decouples buffer size and queue occupancy from contention detection. We evaluate our mechanism in a Dragonfly network. Our evaluations show this mechanism achieves optimal latency under uniform traffic and similar to best previous routing mechanisms under adversarial patterns, with immediate adaptation to traffic pattern changes

    Projective networks : topologies for large parallel computer systems

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    The interconnection network comprises a significant portion of the cost of large parallel computers, both in economic terms and power consumption. Several previous proposals exploit large-radix routers to build scalable low-distance topologies with the aim of minimizing these costs. However, they fail to consider potential unbalance in the network utilization, which in some cases results in suboptimal designs. Based on an appropriate cost model, this paper advocates the use of networks based on incidence graphs of projective planes, broadly denoted as Projective Networks. Projective Networks rely on generalized Moore graphs with uniform link utilization and encompass several proposed direct (PN and demi-PN) and indirect (OFT) topologies under a common mathematical framework. Compared to other proposals with average distance between 2 and 3 hops, these networks provide very high scalability while preserving a balanced network utilization, resulting in low network costs

    Lagarto I RISC-V Multi-core: Research Challenges to Build and Integrate a Network-on-Chip

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    Current compute-intensive applications largely exceed the resources of single-core processors. To face this problem, multi-core processors along with parallel computing techniques have become a solution to increase the computational performance. Likewise, multi-processors are fundamental to support new technologies and new science applications challenges. A specific objective of the Lagarto project developed at the National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico is to generate an ecosystem of high-performance processors for the industry and HPC in Mexico, supporting new technologies and scientific applications. This work presents the first approach of the Lagarto project to the design of multi-core processors and the research challenges to build an infrastructure that allows the flagship core of the Lagarto project to scale to multi- and many-cores. Using the OpenPiton platform with the Ariane RISC-V core, a functional tile has been built, integrating a Lagarto I core with memory coherence that executes atomic instructions, and a NoC that allows scaling the project to many-core versions. This work represents the initial state of the design of mexican multi-and many-cores processors

    Método de encaminamiento adaptativo en redes jerárquicas

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    Método de encaminamiento de paquetes en una red directa jerárquica formada por una pluralidad de encaminadores, cada uno con puertos de tipo local y puertos de tipo global; cada puerto comprende una pluralidad de canales virtuales; dichos encaminadores forman grupos, donde los diferentes encaminadores de un mismo grupo están interconectados mediante una topología conexa empleando enlaces de tipo local uniendo parejas de puertos de tipo local, y los diferentes grupos están interconectados mediante una topología conexa empleando enlaces de tipo global uniendo parejas de puertos de tipo global. El método está configurado para emplear saltos por dichos enlaces de acuerdo a rutas mínimas y no mínimas; los saltos que implican rutas no mínimas pueden realizarse tanto a través de enlaces globales como locales. El número de canales virtuales necesarios en cada puerto local y global viene determinado solamente por la longitud de una ruta máxima permitida que no emplea misrouting de tipo local, empleando para ello un orden total en el recorrido de los canales virtuales, que se viola cuando se realiza un misrouting local.Solicitud: 201200715 (02.07.2012)Nº Pub. de Solicitud: ES2395955A1 (18.02.2013)Nº de Patente: ES2395955B2 (22.01.2014

    Intensification of Antiretroviral Therapy with a CCR5 Antagonist in Patients with Chronic HIV-1 Infection: Effect on T Cells Latently Infected

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    Objective: The primary objective was to assess the effect of MVC intensification on latently infected CD4+ T cells in chronically HIV-1-infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy. Methods: We performed an open-label pilot phase II clinical trial involving chronically HIV-1-infected patients receiving stable antiretroviral therapy whose regimen was intensified with 48 weeks of maraviroc therapy. We analyzed the latent reservoir, the residual viremia and episomal 2LTR DNA to examine the relationship between these measures and the HIV-1 latent reservoir, immune activation, lymphocyte subsets (including effector and central memory T cells), and markers associated with bacterial translocation. Results: Overall a non significant reduction in the size of the latent reservoir was found (p = 0.068). A mean reduction of 1.82 IUPM was observed in 4 patients with detectable latent reservoir at baseline after 48 weeks of intensification. No effect on plasma residual viremia was observed. Unexpectedly, all the patients had detectable 2LTR DNA circles at week 24, while none of them showed those circles at the end of the study. No changes were detected in CD4+ or CD8+ counts, although a significant decrease was found in the proportion of HLA-DR+/CD38+ CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells. LPS and sCD14 levels increased. Conclusions: Intensification with MVC was associated with a trend to a decrease in the size of the latent HIV-1 reservoir in memory T cells. No impact on residual viremia was detected. Additional studies with larger samples are needed to confirm the results

    The Research Journey as a Challenge Towards New Trends

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    The academic community of the department of Risaralda, in its permanent interest in evidencing the results of the research processes that are carried out from the Higher Education Institutions and as a product of the VI meeting of researchers of the department of Risaralda held in November 2021 presents its work: “The journey of research as a challenge towards new trends”, which reflects the result of the latest research and advances in different lines of knowledge in Agricultural Sciences, Health Sciences, Social Sciences and Technology and Information Sciences, which seek to solve and meet the demands of the different sectors. This work would not have been possible without the help of each of the teachers, researchers and authors who presented their articles that make up each of the chapters of the book, to them our gratitude for their commitment, dedication and commitment, since their sole purpose is to contribute from the academy and science to scientific and technological development in the search for the solution of problems and thus contribute to transform the reality of our society and communities. We also wish to extend our gratitude to the institutions of the Network that made this publication possible: UTP, UCP, UNAD, UNIREMINGTON; UNISARC, CIAF, Universidad Libre, Uniclaretiana, Fundación Universitaria Comfamiliar and UNIMINUTO, institutions that in one way or another allowed this work to become a reality, which we hope will be of interest to you.Preface............................................................................................................................7 Chapter 1. Technologies and Engineering Towards a humanization in Engineering using soft skills in training in Engineers.............................................................................................................11 Omar Iván Trejos Buriticá1, Luis Eduardo Muñoz Guerrero Innovative materials in construction: review from a bibliometric analysis....................................................................................................................27 Cristian Osorio Gómez, Daniel Aristizábal Torres, Alejandro Alzate Buitrago, Cristhian Camilo Amariles López Bibliometric review of disaster risk management: progress, trends, and challenges.........................................................................................................51 Alejandro Alzate Buitrago, Gloria Milena Molina Vinasco. Incidence of land coverage and geology, in the unstability of lands of the micro-basin of the Combia creek, Pereira, Risaralda....................................73 Alejandro Alzate Buitrago, Daniel Aristizábal Torres. Chapter 2. Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences Training experience with teachers teaching mathematics using the inquiry methodology ...............................................................................................95 Vivian Libeth Uzuriaga López, Héctor Gerardo Sánchez Bedoya. Interpretation of the multiple representations of the fears associated to the boarding of limited visual patients in the elective I students’ written productions and low vision ...................................................................................113 Eliana Bermúdez Cardona, Ana María Agudelo Guevara, Caterine Villamarín Acosta. The relevance of local knowledge in social sciences............................................131 Alberto Antonio Berón Ospina, Isabel Cristina Castillo Quintero. Basic education students’ conceptions of conflict a view from the peace for the education....................................................................................................143 Astrid Milena Calderón Cárdenas,Carolina Aguirre Arias, Carolina Franco Ossa, Martha Cecilia Gutiérrez Giraldo, Orfa Buitrago. Comprehensive risk prevention in educational settings: an interdisciplinary and socio-educational approach ............................................................................163 Olga María Henao Trujillo, Claudia María López Ortiz. Chapter 3. Natural and Agricultural Sciences Physicochemical characterization of three substrates used in the deep bedding system in swine .......................................................................................175 Juan Manuel Sánchez Rubio, Andrés Felipe Arias Roldan, Jesús Arturo Rincón Sanz, Jaime Andrés Betancourt Vásquez. Periodic solutions in AFM models........................................................................187 Daniel Cortés Zapata, Alexander Gutiérrez Gutiérrez. Phenology in flower and fruit of Rubus glaucus benth. Cv. Thornless in Risaralda: elements for phytosanitary management .........................................199 Shirley Palacios Castro, Andrés Alfonso Patiño Martínez, James Montoya Lerma, Ricardo Flórez, Harry Josué Pérez. Socio-economic and technical characterization of the cultivation of avocado (Persea americana) in Risaralda..............................................................217 Andrés Alfonso Patiño Martínez, Kelly Saudith Castañez Poveda, Eliana Gómez Correa. Biosecurity management in backyard systems in Santa Rosa de Cabal, Risaralda................................................................................................................227 Julia Victoria Arredondo Botero, Jaiver Estiben Ocampo Jaramillo, Juan Sebastián Mera Vallejo, Álvaro de Jesús Aranzazu Hernández. CONTENTS Physical-chemical diagnosis of soils in hillside areas with predominance of Lulo CV. La Selva production system in the department of Risaralda.............241 Adriana Patricia Restrepo Gallón, María Paula Landinez Montes, Jimena Tobón López. Digestibility of three concentrates used in canine feeding....................................271 María Fernanda Mejía Silva, Valentina Noreña Sánchez, Gastón Adolfo Castaño Jiménez. Chapter 4. Economic, Administrative, and Accounting Sciences Financial inclusion in households from socioeconomic strata 1 and 2 in the city of Pereira ..................................................................................................285 Lindy Neth Perea Mosquera, Marlen Isabel Redondo Ramírez, Angélica Viviana Morales. Internal marketing strategies as a competitive advantage for the company Mobilautos SAS de Dosquebradas........................................................................303 Inés Montoya Sánchez, Sandra Patricia Viana Bolaños, Ana María Barrera Rodríguez. Uses of tourist marketing in the tourist sector of the municipality of Belén de Umbría, Risaralda.............................................................................................319 Ana María Barrera Rodríguez, Paola Andrea Echeverri Gutiérrez, María Camila Parra Buitrago, Paola Andrea Martín Muñoz, Angy Paola Ángel Vélez, Luisa Natalia Trejos Ospina. Territorial prospective of Risaralda department (Colombia), based on the SDGS...............................................................................................................333 Juan Guillermo Gil García, Samanta Londoño Velásquez. Chapter 5. Health and Sports Sciences Performance evaluation in times of pandemic. What do medical students think?.......................................................................................................353 Samuel Eduardo Trujillo Henao, Rodolfo A. Cabrales Vega, Germán Alberto Moreno Gómez. The relevance of the therapist’s self and self-reference in the training of psychologists.....................................................................................................371 Maria Paula Marmolejo Lozano, Mireya Ospina Botero. Habits related to oral health which influence lifestyle of elder people in a wellness center for the elderly in Pereira 2020. .............................................387 Isadora Blanco Pérez, Olga Patricia Ramírez Rodríguez, Ángela María Rincón Hurtado. Analysis of the suicide trend in the Coffee Region in Colombia during the years 2012-2018 ..............................................................................................405 Germán Alberto Moreno Gómez, Jennifer Nessim Salazar, Jairo Franco Londoño, Juan Carlos Medina Osorio. Hind limb long bone fractures in canines and felines...........................................419 María Camila Cruz Vélez, Valentina Herrera Morales, Alba Nydia Restrepo Jiménez, Lina Marcela Palomino, Gabriel Rodolfo Izquierdo Bravo. Prevalence of overweight and obesity in children in the rural and urban area of Risaralda....................................................................................................439 Angela María Álvarez López, Angela Liceth Pérez Rendón, Alejandro Gómez Rodas, Luis Enrique Isaza Velásquez. Chapter 6. Architecture, Design and Advertising The artisan crafts of Risaralda, characteristics, importance, and risks within the Colombian Coffee Cultural Landscape, CCCL....................................457 Yaffa Nahir Ivette Gómez Barrera, Javier Alfonso López Morales
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