Evaluating the SAT problem on P systems for different high-performance architectures
Membrane computing is an emergent research area studying the behavior of living cells to define bio-inspired computing devices, also called P systems . Such devices provide polynomial time solutions to NP-complete problems by trading time for space. The efficient simulation of P systems poses three...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of supercomputing 2014-07, Vol.69 (1), p.248-272 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Membrane computing is an emergent research area studying the behavior of living cells to define bio-inspired computing devices, also called
P systems
. Such devices provide polynomial time solutions to NP-complete problems by trading time for space. The efficient simulation of P systems poses three major challenging issues: an intrinsic massive parallelism of P systems, an exponential computational workspace, and a non-intensive floating point nature. This paper analyzes the simulation of a family of recognizer P systems with active membranes that solves the satisfiability problem in linear time on three different architectures: a shared memory multiprocessor, a distributed memory system, and a manycore graphics processing unit (GPU). For an efficient handling of the exponential workspace created by the P systems computation, we enable different data policies on those architectures to increase memory bandwidth and exploit data locality through tiling. Parallelism inherent to the target P system is also managed on each architecture to demonstrate that GPUs offer a valid alternative for high-performance computing at a considerably lower cost. Our results lead to execution time improvements exceeding 310
×
and 78
×
, respectively, for a much cheaper high-performance alternative. |
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ISSN: | 0920-8542 1573-0484 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11227-014-1150-9 |