Parallel Performance Project Research Paper
Research Paper
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Effects of Architectural and Technological Advances
on the HP/Convex Exemplar's Memory and Communication Performance
Gheith A. Abandah and Edward S. Davidson
Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on Computer Architecture
(ISCA'98), pp 318-329, June 1998.
Abstract
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Advances in microarchitecture, packaging, and manufacturing processes
enable designers to build new systems with higher performance and
scalability. Using microbenchmark techniques, we contrast the memory
and communication performance of two generations of the HP/Convex
Exemplar scalable parallel processing system. The SPP1000 and SPP2000
have significant architectural and implementation differences, but
maintain upward binary compatibility. The SPP2000 employs
manufacturing and packaging advances to obtain shorter system
interconnects with wider data paths and improved functionality,
thereby reducing the latency and increasing the bandwidth of remote
communication. Although the memory latency is not significantly
improved, newer out-of-order execution processors coupled with
nonblocking caches achieve much higher memory bandwidth. The SPP2000
has a richer system interconnect topology that allows scalability to a
larger number of processors. The SPP2000 also employs innovations in
its coherence protocols to improve synchronization and communication
performance. This paper characterizes the performance effects of these
changes, and identifies some remaining inefficiencies, in the cache
coherence protocol and the node configuration, that future
systems should address.
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