DocumentCode :
3678374
Title :
Comparing Global Link Arrangements for Dragonfly Networks
Author :
Emily Hastings;David Rincon-Cruz;Marc Spehlmann;Sofia Meyers;Anda Xu;David P. Bunde;Vitus J. Leung
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Knox Coll., Galesburg, IL, USA
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
361
Lastpage :
370
Abstract :
High-performance computing systems are shifting away from traditional interconnect topologies to exploit new technologies and to reduce interconnect power consumption. The Dragonfly topology is one promising candidate for new systems, with several variations already in production. It is hierarchical, with local links forming groups and global links joining the groups. At each level, the interconnect is a clique, with a link between each pair of switches in a group and a link between each pair of groups. This paper shows that the intergroup links can be made in meaningfully different ways. We evaluate three previously-proposed approaches for link organization (called global link arrangements) in two ways. First, we use bisection bandwidth, an important and commonly-used measure of the potential for communication bottlenecks. We show that the global link arrangements often give bisection bandwidths differing by 10s of percent, with the specific separation varying based on the relative bandwidths of local and global links. For the link bandwidths used in a current Dragonfly implementation, it is 33%. Second, we show that the choice of global link arrangement can greatly impact the regularity of task mappings for nearest neighbor stencil communication patterns, an important pattern in scientific applications.
Keywords :
"Bandwidth","Optical switches","Ports (Computers)","Optical fiber communication","Topology","Joining processes","Routing"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Cluster Computing (CLUSTER), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CLUSTER.2015.57
Filename :
7307604
Link To Document :
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