Randomized Routing on Fat-Trees

Ronald I. Greenberg, Charles E. Leiserson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Fat-trees are a class of routing networks for hardware-efficient parallel computation. This paper presents a randomized algorithm for routing messages on a fat-tree. The quality of the algorithm is measured in terms of the load factor of a set of messages to be routed, which is a lower bound on the time required to deliver the messages. We show that if a set of messages has load factor lambda on a fat-tree with n processors, the number of delivery cycles (routing attempts) that the algorithm requires is O(lambda + lg n lg lg n) with probability 1-O(1/n). The best previous bound was O(lambda lg n) for the offline problem in which the set of messages is known in advance. In the context of a VLSI model that equates hardware cost with physical volume, the routing algorithm can be used to demonstrate that fat-trees are universal routing networks. Specifically, we prove that any routing network can be efficiently simulated by a fat-tree of comparable hardware cost.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalComputer Science: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Volume5
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 1989

Keywords

  • area-universal networks
  • fat-trees
  • randomized routing
  • message routing
  • parallel computation

Disciplines

  • Computer Sciences
  • OS and Networks
  • Theory and Algorithms
  • VLSI and Circuits, Embedded and Hardware Systems

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