Title :
Adaptive Routing Strategies for Modern High Performance Networks
Author :
Geoffray, Patrick ; Hoefler, Torsten
Author_Institution :
Software Dev. Lab. Arcadia, Myricom Inc., Arcadia, CA
Abstract :
Today´s scalable high-performance applications heavily depend on the bandwidth characteristics of their communication patterns. Contemporary multi-stage interconnection networks suffer from network contention which might decrease application performance. Our experiments show that the effective bisection bandwidth of a non-blocking 512-node Clos network is as low as 38% if the network is routed statically.In this paper, we propose and analyze different adaptive routing schemes for those networks. We chose Myrinet/MX to implement our proposed routing schemes. Our best adaptive routing scheme is able to increase the effective bisection bandwidth to 77% for 512 nodes and 100% for smaller node counts. Thus, we show that our proposed adaptive routing schemes are able to improve network throughput significantly.
Keywords :
computer networks; telecommunication network routing; adaptive routing strategies; bandwidth characteristics; communication patterns; modern high performance networks; multistage interconnection networks; network contention; Application software; Bandwidth; Ethernet networks; Fabrics; Hardware; Laboratories; Multiprocessor interconnection networks; Network topology; Routing; Scalability; Clos networks; adaptive routing; bisection bandwidth; head-of-line blocking;
Conference_Titel :
High Performance Interconnects, 2008. HOTI '08. 16th IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Stanford, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3380-3
DOI :
10.1109/HOTI.2008.21