Conference proceeding
SOME-Bus-NOW: a Network of Wrkstations with broadcast
Second IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications, 2003. NCA 2003
2003
Abstract
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.
Metrics
14 Record Views
2 citations in Scopus
Details
- Title
- SOME-Bus-NOW: a Network of Wrkstations with broadcast
- Creators
- C Katsinis - Drexel UniversityD Hecht - Drexel University
- Publication Details
- Second IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications, 2003. NCA 2003
- Conference
- Second IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications, 2003. NCA 2003, 2nd
- Publisher
- IEEE
- Resource Type
- Conference proceeding
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Computer Science
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000182808600015
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-84942099706
- Other Identifier
- 991019169553504721
InCites Highlights
Data related to this publication, from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool:
- Web of Science research areas
- Computer Science, Theory & Methods
- Telecommunications