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SOME-Bus-NOW: a Network of Wrkstations with broadcast
Conference proceeding

SOME-Bus-NOW: a Network of Wrkstations with broadcast

C Katsinis and D Hecht
Second IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications, 2003. NCA 2003
2003

Abstract

Bandwidth Broadcasting Control systems Message passing Multiprocessor interconnection networks Optical fiber networks Optical interconnections Optical receivers Optical transmitters Workstations
Networks of Workstations have been mostly designed using switch-based architectures and programming based on message passing. This paper describes a network of workstations based on the Simultaneous Optical Multiprocessor Exchange Bus (SOME-Bits) which is a low-latency, high-bandwidth interconnection network that directly links arbitrary pairs of processor nodes without contention, and can efficiently interconnect several hundred nodes. Each node has a dedicated output channel and an array of receivers, with one receiver dedicated to every other node's output channel. The SOME-Bus eliminates the need for global arbitration and provides bandwidth that scales directly with the number of nodes in the system. Under the Distributed Shared Memory (DSM) paradigm, the SOME-bus allows strong integration of the transmitter, receiver and cache controller hardware to produce a highly integrated system-wide cache coherence mechanism. This paper examines switch-based networks that maintain high performance under varying degrees of application locality, and compares them to the SOME-Bus, in terms of latency and processor utilization.

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Web of Science research areas
Computer Science, Theory & Methods
Telecommunications
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