• Title/Summary/Keyword: 인피니밴드

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Analysis of Performance Requirement for Large-Scale InfiniBand-based DVSM System (대용량의 InfiniBand 기반 DVSM 시스템 구현을 위한 성능 요구 분석)

  • Cho, Myeong-Jin;Kim, Seon-Wook
    • The KIPS Transactions:PartA
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    • v.14A no.4
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    • pp.215-226
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    • 2007
  • For past years, many distributed virtual shared-memory(DVSM) systems have been studied in order to develop a low-cost shared memory system with a fast interconnection network. But the DVSM needs a lot of data and control communication between distributed processing nodes in order to provide memory consistency in software, and this communication overhead significantly dominates the overall performance. In general, the communication overhead also increases as the number of processing nodes increase, so communication overhead is a very important performance factor for developing a large-scale DVSM system. In this paper, we study the performance scalability quantitatively and qualitatively for developing a large-scale DVSM system based on the next generation interconnection network, called the InfiniBand. Based on the study, we analyze a performance requirement of the next-coming interconnection network to be used for developing a performance-scalable DVSM system in the future.

An Optimization Tool for Determining Processor Affinity of Networking Processes (통신 프로세스의 프로세서 친화도 결정을 위한 최적화 도구)

  • Cho, Joong-Yeon;Jin, Hyun-Wook
    • KIPS Transactions on Software and Data Engineering
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.131-136
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    • 2013
  • Multi-core processors can improve parallelism of application processes and thus can enhance the system throughput. Researchers have recently revealed that the processor affinity is an important factor to determine network I/O performance due to architectural characteristics of multi-core processors; thus, many researchers are trying to suggest a scheme to decide an optimal processor affinity. Existing schemes to dynamically decide the processor affinity are able to transparently adapt for system changes, such as modifications of application and upgrades of hardware, but these have limited access to characteristics of application behavior and run-time information that can be collected heuristically. Thus, these can provide only sub-optimal processor affinity. In this paper, we define meaningful system variables for determining optimal processor affinity and suggest a tool to gather such information. We show that the implemented tool can overcome limitations of existing schemes and can improve network bandwidth.