DocumentCode
474876
Title
Localized asynchronous packet scheduling for buffered crossbar switches
Author
Pan, Deng ; Yang, Yuanyuan
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., State Univ. of New York, Stony Brook, NY
fYear
2006
fDate
3-5 Dec. 2006
Firstpage
153
Lastpage
162
Abstract
In such a switch, besides normal input queues and output queues, a small buffer is associated with each crosspoint. Due to the introduction of crosspoint buffers, output and input contention is eliminated, and the scheduling process for buffered crossbar switches is greatly simplified. Moreover, crosspoint buffers enable the switch to work in an asynchronous mode and easily schedule and transmit variable length packets. Compared with fixed length packet scheduling or cell scheduling, variable length packet scheduling, or packet scheduling for short, has some unique advantages: higher throughput, shorter packet latency and lower hardware cost. In this paper, we present a fast and practical scheduling scheme for buffered crossbar switches called Localized Asynchronous Packet Scheduling (LAPS). With LAPS, an input port or output port makes scheduling decisions solely based on the state information of its local crosspoint buffers, i.e., the crosspoint buffers where the input port sends packets to or the output port retrieves packets from. The localization property makes LAPS suitable for a distributed implementation and thus highly scalable. Since no comparison operation is required in LAPS, scheduling arbiters can be efficiently implemented using priority encoders, which can make arbitration decisions quickly in hardware. Another advantage of LAPS is that each crosspoint needs only L (the maximum packet length) buffer space, which minimizes the hardware cost of the switches. We also theoretically analyze the performance of LAPS, and in particular we prove that LAPS achieves 100% throughput for any admissible traffic with speedup of two. Finally, simulations are conducted to verify the analytical results and measure the performance of LAPS.
Keywords
packet switching; queueing theory; scheduling; buffered crossbar switches; cell scheduling; fixed length packet scheduling; input queues; localized asynchronous packet scheduling; output queues; priority encoders; scheduling process; Costs; Delay; Hardware; Information retrieval; Packet switching; Performance analysis; Scheduling algorithm; Switches; Throughput; Traffic control; 100% throughput; buffered crossbar switches; packet scheduling; priority encoders;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Architecture for Networking and Communications systems, 2006. ANCS 2006. ACM/IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-59593-580-9
Type
conf
Filename
4579533
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