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Achieving a Balanced Low-Cost Architecture for Mass Storage Management through Multiple Fast Ethernet Channels on the Beowulf Parallel Workstation

Thomas Sterling Donald J. Becker
Center of Excellence in Space Data
and Information Sciences
Code 930.5 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD 20771
{tron, becker}@cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov - Daniel Savarese
Department of Computer Science
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
dfs@cs.umd.edu - Michael R. Berry
Department of Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science
The George Washington University
Washington, D.C. 20052
mrberry@seas.gwu.edu - Chance Reschke
Center of Excellence in Space Data
and Information Sciences
Code 930.5 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD 20771
creschke@cesdis.gsfc.nasa.gov

Abstract:

Network-of-Workstations (NOW) seek to leverage commercial workstation technology to produce high performance computing systems at costs appreciably lower than parallel computers specifically designed for that purpose. The capabilities of technologies emerging from the PC commodity mass market are rapidly evolving to converge with those of workstations while at significantly lower cost. A new operating point in the price-performance design space of parallel system architecture may be derived through parallelism of PC subsystems. The Pile-of-PCs, PopC (pronounced ``pop-see''), approach is being explored through the Beowulf Parallel Workstation developed to provide order-of-magnitude increases in disk capacity and bandwidth for a single user environment at costs commensurate with conventional high-end workstations. This paper explores a critical aspect of the architecture trade-off space for Beowulf associated with the balance of parallel disk throughput and internal network bandwidth. The findings presented demonstrate that parallel channels of commodity 100 Mbps Ethernet are both necessary and sufficient to support the data rates of multiple concurrent file transfers on a sixteen processor Beowulf parallel workstation.





Chance Reschke
Mon Nov 4 12:29:54 EST 1996