Dally / Towles | Principles and Practices of Interconnection Networks | Buch | 978-0-12-200751-4 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 576 Seiten, Format (B × H): 195 mm x 243 mm, Gewicht: 1290 g

Dally / Towles

Principles and Practices of Interconnection Networks


Erscheinungsjahr 2003
ISBN: 978-0-12-200751-4
Verlag: Elsevier Science

Buch, Englisch, 576 Seiten, Format (B × H): 195 mm x 243 mm, Gewicht: 1290 g

ISBN: 978-0-12-200751-4
Verlag: Elsevier Science


One of the greatest challenges faced by designers of digital systems is optimizing the communication and interconnection between system components. Interconnection networks offer an attractive and economical solution to this communication crisis and are fast becoming pervasive in digital systems. Current trends suggest that this communication bottleneck will be even more problematic when designing future generations of machines. Consequently, the anatomy of an interconnection network router and science of interconnection network design will only grow in importance in the coming years.This book offers a detailed and comprehensive presentation of the basic principles of interconnection network design, clearly illustrating them with numerous examples, chapter exercises, and case studies. It incorporates hardware-level descriptions of concepts, allowing a designer to see all the steps of the process from abstract design to concrete implementation.

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Zielgruppe


Practitioners, researchers and students in Computer Architecture and Digital System Design.

Weitere Infos & Material


Chapter 1 Introduction to Interconnection Networks

1.1 Three Questions About Interconnection Networks

1.2 Uses of Interconnection Networks

1.3 Network Basics

1.4 History

1.5 Organization of this Book

Chapter 2 A Simple Interconnection Network

2.1 Network Specifications and Constraints

2.2 Topology

2.3 Routing

2.4 Flow Control

2.5 Router Design

2.6 Performance Analysis

2.7 Exercises

Chapter 3 Topology Basics

3.1 Nomenclature

3.2 Traffic Patterns

3.3 Performance

3.4 Packaging Cost

3.5 Case Study: The SGI Origin 2000

3.6 Bibliographic Notes

3.7 Exercises

Chapter 4 Butterfly Networks

4.1 The Structure of Butterfly Networks

4.2 Isomorphic Butterflies

4.3 Performance and Packaging Cost

4.4 Path Diversity and Extra Stages

4.5 Case Study: The BBN Butterfly

4.6 Bibliographic Notes

4.7 Exercises

Chapter 5 Torus Networks

5.1 The Structure of Torus Networks

5.2 Performance

5.3 Building Mesh and Torus Networks

5.4 Express Cubes

5.5 Case Study: The MIT J-Machine

5.6 Bibliographic Notes

5.7 Exercises

Chapter 6 Non-Blocking Networks

6.1 Non-Blocking vs. Non-Interfering Networks

6.2 Crossbar Networks

6.3 Clos Networks

6.4 Benes Networks

6.5 Sorting Networks

6.6 Case Study: The Velio VC2002 (Zeus) Grooming Switch

6.7 Bibliographic Notes

6.8 Exercises

Chapter 7 Slicing and Dicing

7.1 Concentrators and Distributors

7.2 Slicing and Dicing

7.3 Slicing Multistage Networks

7.4 Case Study: Bit Slicing in the Tiny Tera

7.5 Bibliographic Notes

7.6 Exercises

Chapter 8 Routing Basics

8.1 A Routing Example

8.2 Taxonomy of Routing Algorithms

8.3 The Routing Relation

8.4 Deterministic Routing

8.5 Case Study: Dimension-Order Routing in the Cray T3D

8.6 Bibliographic Notes

8.7 Exercises

Chapter 9 Oblivious Routing

9.1 Valiant's Randomized Routing Algorithm

9.2 Minimal Oblivious Routing

9.3 Load-Balanced Oblivious Routing

9.4 Analysis of Oblivious Routing

9.5 Case Study: Oblivious Routing in the
Avici Terabit Switch Router(TSR)

9.6 Bibliographic Notes

9.7 Exercises

Chapter 10 Adaptive Routing

10.1 Adaptive Routing Basics

10.2 Minimal Adaptive Routing

10.3 Fully Adaptive Routing

10.4 Load-Balanced Adaptive Routing

10.5 Search-Based Routing

10.6 Case Study: Adaptive Routing in the
Thinking Machines CM-5

10.7 Bibliographic Notes

10.8 Exercises

Chapter 11 Routing Mechanics

11.1 Table-Based Routing

11.2 Algorithmic Routing

11.3 Case Study: Oblivious Source Routing in the
IBM Vulcan Network

11.4 Bibliographic Notes

11.5 Exercises

Chapter 12 Flow Control Basics

12.1 Resources and Allocation Units

12.2 Bufferless Flow Control

12.3 Circuit Switching

12.4 Bibliographic Notes

12.5 Exercises

Chapter 13 Buffered Flow Control

13.1 Packet-Buffer Flow Control

13.2 Flit-Buffer Flow Control

13.3 Buffer Management and Backpressure

13.4 Flit-Reservation Flow Control

13.5 Bibliographic Notes

13.6 Exercises

Chapter 14 Deadlock and Livelock

14.1 Deadlock

14.2 Deadlock Avoidance

14.3 Adaptive Routing

14.4 Deadlock Recovery

14.5 Livelock

14.6 Case Study: Deadlock Avoidance in the Cray T3E

14.7 Bibliographic Notes

14.8 Exercises

Chapter 15 Quality of Service

15.1 Service Classes and Service Contracts

15.2 Burstiness and Network Delays

15.3 Implementation of Guaranteed Services

15.4 Implementation of Best-Effort Services

15.5 Separation of Resources

15.6 Case Study: ATM Service Classes

15.7 Case Study: Virtual Networks in the Avici TSR

15.8 Bibliographic Notes

15.9 Exercises

Chapter 16 Router Architecture

16.1 Basic Router Architecture

16.2 Stalls

16.3 Closing the Loop with Credits

16.4 Reallocating a Channel

16.5 Speculation and Lookahead

16.6 Flit and Credit Encoding

16.7 Case Study: The Alpha 21364 Router

16.8 Bibliographic Notes

16.9 Exercises

Chapter 17 Router Datapath Components

17.1 Input Buffer Organization

17.2 Switches

17.3 Output Organization

17.4 Case Study: The Datapath of the IBM Colony
Router

17.5 Bibliographic Notes

17.6 Exercises

Chapter 18 Arbitration

18.1 Arbitration Timing

18.2 Fairness

18.3 Fixed Priority Arbiter

18.4 Variable Priority Iterative Arbiters

18.5 Matrix Arbiter

18.6 Queuing Arbiter

18.7 Exercises

Chapter 19 Allocation

19.1 Representations
19.2 Exact Algorithms
19.3 Separable Allocators

19.4 Wavefront Allocator

19.5 Incremental vs. Batch Allocation

19.6 Multistage Allocation

19.7 Performance of Allocators

19.8 Case Study: The Tiny Tera Allocator

19.9 Bibliographic Notes

19.10 Exercises

Chapter 20 Network Interfaces

20.1 Processor-Network Interface

20.2 Shared-Memory Interface

20.3 Line-Fabric Interface

20.4 Case Study: The MIT M-Machine Network Interface

20.5 Bibliographic Notes

20.6 Exercises

Chapter 21 Error Control 411
21.1 Know Thy Enemy: Failure Modes and Fault Models

21.2 The Error Control Process: Detection, Containment,
and Recovery

21.3 Link Level Error Control

21.4 Router Error Control

21.5 Network-Level Error Control

21.6 End-to-end Error Control

21.7 Bibliographic Notes

21.8 Exercises

Chapter 22 Buses

22.1 Bus Basics

22.2 Bus Arbitration

22.3 High Performance Bus Protocol

22.4 From Buses to Networks

22.5 Case Study: The PCI Bus

22.6 Bibliographic Notes

22.7 Exercises

Chapter 23 Performance Analysis

23.1 Measures of Interconnection Network Performance

23.2 Analysis

23.3 Validation
23.4 Case Study: Efficiency and Loss in the
BBN Monarch Network

23.5 Bibliographic Notes

23.6 Exercises

Chapter 24 Simulation

24.1 Levels of Detail

24.2 Network Workloads

24.3 Simulation Measurements

24.4 Simulator Design

24.5 Bibliographic Notes

24.6 Exercises

Chapter 25 Simulation Examples 495
25.1 Routing
25.2 Flow Control Performance

25.3 Fault Tolerance

Appendix A Nomenclature

Appendix B Glossary

Appendix C Network Simulator



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