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Resumen de Photonic interconnection networks for exascale computers

José Duro Gómez

  • In the last recent years, multiple research projects around the world have focused on the design of supercomputers able to reach the exascale computing barrier, with the aim of supporting the execution of important applications for our society, such as health, artificial intelligence, meteorology, etc. According to the growing trend in the computational power in each supercomputer generation, this objective is expected to be reached in the coming years. However, achieving this goal requires addressing distinct major challenges in the design and development of the system. One of the main ones is to achieve fast and efficient communications between the huge number of computational nodes and the memory systems.

    Photonics technology provides several advantages over current electrical networks, such as higher bandwidth in the links, greater network parallelism thanks to DWDM, or better cable management due to its much smaller size. In this thesis, a feasibility study and development of interconnection networks have been developed using photonics technology for future exascale systems within the European project ExaNeSt.

    First, a characterization study of exascale applications from the network requirements has been carried out. The results of the analysis help understand the network requirements of exascale applications, and thereby guide us in the design of the system network. This analysis considers three main parameters: the distribution of the messages based on their size and type, the required bandwidth consumption throughout the execution, and the spatial communication patterns between the nodes. The study reveals the need for a fast and efficient interconnection network, since most communications consist of bursts of transmissions, each with an average message size of 50 KB.

    Next, this dissertation concentrates on identifying the main elements that differentiate photonic networks from electrical ones. We identify a sequence of steps in the design and implementation of a simulator either i) dealing with photonic technology from scratch or ii) to extend an existing electrical network simulator in order to model photonics.

    After that, two main performance comparison studies between electrical networks and different configurations of photonic networks are presented using classical topologies. In the former study, carried out with both synthetic traffic and traces of ExaNeSt in a torus, fat tree and dragonfly, we found that photonic technology represents a noticeable improvement over electrical technology. Furthermore, the study shows that the parameter that most affects the performance is the bandwidth of the photonic channel. The latter study analyzes performance of real applications in large-scale simulations in a jellyfish topology. The results of this study corroborates the conclusions obtained in the previous, also revealing that photonic technology allows reducing the complexity of some topologies, and therefore, the cost of the network.

    In the previous studies we realize that the network was underutilized mainly because the studied topologies for electrical networks do not take advantage of the features provided by photonic technology. For this reason, we propose Segment Switching, a switching strategy aimed at reducing the length of the routes by implementing buffers at intermediate nodes along the path. Experimental results show that each of the studied topologies presents different buffering requirements. For the torus, the higher the number of buffers in the network, the higher the performance. For the fat tree, the key parameter is the buffer size, achieving similar performance a configuration with buffers on all switches that locating buffers only at the top level.

    In summary, this thesis studies the use of photonic technology for networks of exascale systems, and proposes to take advantage of the characteristics of this technology in current electrical network topologies.


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