Network Interface Specification for the T1 Microprocessor

Abstract

The overall performance of a multicomputer depends heavily on the interface between the software and the communication hardware. As pointed out in von Eicken's thesis, this communication architecture should be versatile in that it be able to support a variety of different communication models, including shared memory, dataflow, and send&receive; it should support an efficient implementation of each model; and it should be incremental in that it shouldn't interface with the computation performance of the processor. Active Messages communication architectures have been shown to satisfy these criteria. Software implementation of Active Messages have reduced communication overhead by over an order an order of magnitude to near the minimum possible given existing of an Active Message communication architecture, resulting in another order of magnitude reduction in communication overhead. The Active Message communication architecture defined in this report is an extension to the MIPS-II instruction set architecture. The resulting architecture features data transfer directly to/ from processor registers, hardware dispatch directly to Active Message handlers (along with limited context preservation), automatic atomicity of handlers, cheap synchronization operations, and hardware support for multicast.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 1994
Accession Number
ADA283392

Entities

People

  • Timothy J. Callahan

Organizations

  • University of California, Berkeley

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DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Algorithms
  • Application Software
  • Coding
  • Computations
  • Computer Architecture
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer Science
  • Computers
  • Computing System Architectures
  • Data Transmission
  • Hypervelocity Flow
  • Instruction Set Architecture
  • Language
  • Operating Systems
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  • Standards
  • Two Dimensional

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Computer Networking
  • Parallel and Distributed Computing.