Annealed embeddings of communication patterns in an interconnection cached network
The communication needs of many parallel applications exhibit what we call switching locality. In such applications, each computation entity (process, thread, etc.) tends to restrict its communication to a small set of other entities. The physical location or proximity of these entities can be arbit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on parallel and distributed systems 1995-11, Vol.6 (11), p.1153-1167 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The communication needs of many parallel applications exhibit what we call switching locality. In such applications, each computation entity (process, thread, etc.) tends to restrict its communication to a small set of other entities. The physical location or proximity of these entities can be arbitrary, as long as the communication degree is small. The Interconnection Cached Network (ICN) is a reconfigurable network ideally suited for exploiting such locality. The use of fast small crossbar switches (Interconnection Caches) with a larger, but slower, reconfigurable network (optimized for connectivity) lets the ICN adapt to the communication requirements of individual applications, potentially achieving higher performance. Embedding communication patterns efficiently in an ICN, requires finding a bounded l-contraction of the underlying communication graph. The problem of identifying whether a graph has a bounded and l-contraction for a given integer l is known to be NP-complete for l>2. We describe a heuristic algorithm based on simulated annealing for this problem. We test the effectiveness of our approach by using it to embed graphs, representing regular communication patterns, for which the best solutions are deterministically known. The algorithm does not rely on any structural information of the communication pattern and is therefore applicable to irregular patterns as well. The results of applying our heuristics to embed such irregular graphs are also presented. |
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ISSN: | 1045-9219 1558-2183 |
DOI: | 10.1109/71.476187 |