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Get Free AccessThe FLASH multiprocessor efficiently integrates support for cache-coherent shared memory and high-performance message passing, while minimizing both hardware and software overhead. Each node in FLASH contains a microprocessor, a portion of the machine's global memory, a port to the interconnection network, an I/O interface, and a custom node controller called MAGIC. The MAGIC chip handles all communication both within the node and among nodes, using hardwired data paths for efficient data movement and a programmable processor optimized for executing protocol operations. The use of the protocol processor makes FLASH very flexible --- it can support a variety of different communication mechanisms --- and simplifies the design and implementation.This paper presents the architecture of FLASH and MAGIC, and discusses the base cache-coherence and message-passing protocols. Latency and occupancy numbers, which are derived from our system-level simulator and our Verilog code, are given for several common protocol operations. The paper also describes our software strategy and FLASH's current status.
Jeffrey S. Kuskin, David Ofelt, Mark Heinrich, John Heinlein, Richard Simoni, Kourosh Gharachorloo, John Chapin, D. Nakahira, Joel Baxter, Mark Horowitz, Aman Gupta, Mendel Rosenblum, John L. Hennessy (1994). The Stanford FLASH multiprocessor. International Symposium on Computer Architecture, 22(2), pp. 302-313, DOI: 10.1145/191995.192056.
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Type
Article
Year
1994
Authors
13
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
International Symposium on Computer Architecture
DOI
10.1145/191995.192056
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