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Off-Loading Data Distribution Management to Network Processors in HLA-Based Distributed Simulations
Budapest, Hungary October 21-October 23
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/DS-RT.2004.32Eighth IEEE International Symposium o ...
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Andrea Santoro, Università di Roma "La Sapienza"
Richard M. Fujimoto, Georgia Institute of Technology
The High Level Architecture (HLA) standard developed by the Department of Defense in the United States is a key technology to perform distributed simulation. Inside the HLA framework many different simulators (termed federates) may be interconnected to create a single, more complex simulator (federation). Data Distribution Management (DDM) is an optional subset of services that controls which federates should receive notification of state modifications made by other federates. A simple DDM implementation will usually generate much more traffic than needed, while a complex one might introduce too much overhead. In this work we describe an approach to DDM that delegates a portion of the DDM computation to a processor on the network card, in order to provide more CPU time for other federate and RTI computations, while still being able to exploit the benefits of a complex DDM implementation to reduce the amount of information exchange.
Citation:
Andrea Santoro, Richard M. Fujimoto, "Off-Loading Data Distribution Management to Network Processors in HLA-Based Distributed Simulations," ds-rt, pp.12-19, Eighth IEEE International Symposium on Distributed Simulation and Real-Time Applications (DS-RT'04), 2004
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