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Performance of a Mixed Shared/Distributed Memory Parallel Network Simulator
Kufstein, Austria May 16-May 19
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/PADS.2004.130128118th Workshop on Parallel and Distrib ...
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Cameron Kiddle, University of Calgary
Rob Simmonds, University of Calgary
Brian Unger, University of Calgary

Designing fast parallel discrete event simulation systems for shared-memory parallel computers is simplified by the efficient communication operations enabled by the common memory space. The dif.culties involved in designing large shared-memory computers and the resulting high cost of even modest size systems has led to the proliferation of computer systems consisting of small shared-memory computers connected via low-latency message-passing interconnection networks.

This paper describes how a network simulation system using a simulation kernel optimized for high performance operation on shared-memory parallel computers has been extended to operate on computers that mix shared-memory and message-passing paradigms. Results are presented showing that the system can achieve over 60 million simulated packet transmissions per second on 32 4-processor nodes. The results demonstrate the advantage of using a mixture of shared-memory and message-passing over using only message-passing in many cases.

Index Terms:
Conservative Parallel Discrete Event Simulation, Network Simulation, Scalable Network Simulation
Citation:
Cameron Kiddle, Rob Simmonds, Brian Unger, "Performance of a Mixed Shared/Distributed Memory Parallel Network Simulator," pads, pp.17-25, 18th Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Simulation (PADS'04), 2004
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