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Dynamic Replication to Improve Input/Output Scalability of Genomic Alignment
Seattle, Washington June 21-June 21
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/CLADE.2003.1210000International Workshop on Challenges ...
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Preethy Vaidyanathan, University of California Santa Cruz
Tara M. Madhyastha, University of California Santa Cruz
Many scientific applications are I/O-intensive, which makes optimization and scaling difficult, especially on parallel architectures. The I/O requirements of computational biology applications are different from other scientific applications; many are embarrassingly parallel and require repeated read-only access to a large global database. In the first part of this paper we examine the scalability of an embarrassingly parallel computational biology application: psLayout, which played a crucial role in the mapping of the human genome. Input file location is a important factor affecting the scalability and performance of this application. We designed a library for automatic data replication to address this issue. In the second part of this paper we describe our user-level library for location-transparent storage.
Citation:
Preethy Vaidyanathan, Tara M. Madhyastha, "Dynamic Replication to Improve Input/Output Scalability of Genomic Alignment," clade, pp.54, International Workshop on Challenges of Large Applications in Distributed Environments, 2003
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