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Topological Characterization of Hamming and Dragonfly Networks and Its Implications on Routing

Abstract: Current High-Performance Computing (HPC) and data center networks rely on large-radix routers. Hamming graphs (Cartesian products of complete graphs) and dragonflies (two-level direct networks with nodes organized in groups) are some direct topologies proposed for such networks. The original definition of the dragonfly topology is very loose, with several degrees of freedom, such as the inter- and intragroup topology, the specific global connectivity, and the number of parallel links between groups (or trunking level). This work provides a comprehensive analysis of the topological properties of the dragonfly network, providing balancing conditions for network dimensioning, as well as introducing and classifying several alternatives for the global connectivity and trunking level. From a topological study of the network, it is noted that a Hamming graph can be seen as a canonical dragonfly topology with a high level of trunking. Based on this observation and by carefully selecting the global connectivity, the Dimension Order Routing (DOR) mechanism safely used in Hamming graphs is adapted to dragonfly networks with trunking. The resulting routing algorithms approximate the performance of minimal, nonminimal, and adaptive routings typically used in dragonflies but without requiring virtual channels to avoid packet deadlock, thus allowing for lower cost router implementations. This is obtained by properly selecting the link to route between groups based on a graph coloring of network routers. Evaluations show that the proposed mechanisms are competitive with traditional solutions when using the same number of virtual channels and enable for simpler implementations with lower cost. Finally, multilevel dragonflies are discussed, considering how the proposed mechanisms could be adapted to them.

Otras publicaciones de la misma revista o congreso con autores/as de la Universidad de Cantabria

 Fuente: ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization, 2014, 11(4), Article 39

Editorial: Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

 Fecha de publicación: 01/12/2014

Nº de páginas: 25

Tipo de publicación: Artículo de Revista

 DOI: 10.1145/2677038

ISSN: 1544-3566,1544-3973

 Proyecto español: TIN2010-21291-C02-02 ; TIN2013-46957-C2-2-P,

Url de la publicación: https://doi.org/10.1145/2677038