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Douglas Eadline, Cluster World Magazine deadline at clusterworld.comMon Feb 7 07:34:44 PST 2005
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On Fri, 4 Feb 2005, Andrew Piskorski wrote: > On Thu, Feb 03, 2005 at 04:53:27AM +0100, Vincent Diepeveen wrote: > > > Please note MPI is probably what i'll use, though i keep finding > > online information about 'gamma'. Is that faster latency than MPI > > implementations? > > http://www.disi.unige.it/project/gamma/ > > Gamma is a non-TCP/IP Linux 2.6.x network driver for Intel Pro/1000 > gigabit ethernet cards, for use with MPI. It offers much better > latency (11 us or so) than TCP/IP over ethernet (maybe 60 or 100 us), > but worse than the specialized HPC interconnects (maybe 3 us). The "60-100 us" is incorrect. With proper tuning an e1000 can get 25us latency (using netpipe). (see Jossip's post about tunning parameters) Oh, and by the way this was using a 32 PCI desk top card. A low latency number is not the whole story however, processor load is another issue. The point is that tuning can make a difference. Default values are usually set for maximum throughput and low CPU overhead. It all depends on what your application needs. If you need GAMMA, then that is a good choice, but many applications may work well with proper tuning of NIC parameters. As an aside, Netgear used to sell a low cost desktop NIC (GA302T-tigon3/Broadcom) which had very good numbers as well. I profiled this NIC in the first issue of ClusterWorld. Doug > > The attraction of GAMMA, is that Intel Pro/1000 cards can be had for > $11 to $60 or so each (depending on exact model, etc.), and gigabit > switches are also pretty cheap, while SCI or Myrinet is somewhere in > the $500 to $1500 per node range (I don't keep track). > > So if your application can benefit from lower latency, but you want > something really cheap, GAMMA should be well worth trying. > > -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Editor-in-chief ClusterWorld Magazine Desk: 610.865.6061 Fax: 610.865.6618 www.clusterworld.com
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