MPI over ATM help or how-to?
Gerry Creager N5JXS
gerry at cs.tamu.edu
Sat Mar 30 15:11:34 PST 2002
Marketting types, setting cost-per-port for ATM at 4x GBE and 20x
100BaseT effectively killed ATM for LAN and SAN. It's still viable for
operations that benefit from connection-oriented operations, in the case
of this forum, that being the Grid initiatives.
I don't see ATM returning to the LAN forefront. I see GBE to the
desktop and MPLS-based protocols surging ahead of it. That said, I
suspect that after a foray into packet-based protocols without ensured
sessions connectivity the carriers will return to ATM or MPLS with
DiffServ-based QoS.
But then again, I'm really an ATM bigot...
gerry
--
joachim at lfbs.rwth-aachen.de wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Mar 29, 2002 at 09:13:19AM -0500, Lechner, David wrote:
> >
> > > I am trying to do a comparison for customers that use ATM now - our goal is
> > > to demonstrate the performance improvement in running native and optimized
> > > FE communications vs. ATM (the cost savings is obvious) -
> >
> > I looked on the web and the only "native" ATM MPI implementation I see
> > is MetaMPICH, which seems to have gone defunct before delivering the
> > ATM part. So you are stuck with IP emulation over ATM, which is
> > probably never faster than fast ethernet.
>
> MetaMPICH (which I was involved with) was designed to couple
> distributed MPI machines (T3E and SP2, in this case) via WAN
> (4 x 622Mbit ATM, in this case). Therefore, we needed to use
> multiple message routers on each machine. This worked quite well
> for certain classes of applications (coupled simulations).
>
> It is no "native"
> ATM usage in the sense that two processes directly exchange
> data via ATM. ATM for LAN or even SAN usage is quite dead, as
> I see it.
>
> Joachim
>
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--
Gerry Creager -- gerry at cs.tamu.edu
Network Engineering
Academy for Advanced Telecommunications and Learning Technologies
Texas A&M University 979.458.4020 (Phone) -- 979.847.8578 (Fax)
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