TY - JOUR
T1 - Wide-Area Implementation of the Message Passing Interface
AU - Foster, Ian
AU - Geisler, Jonathan
AU - Gropp, William
AU - Karonis, Nicholas
AU - Lusk, Ewing
AU - Thiruvathukal, George K.
AU - Tuecke, Steven
N1 - Ian T. Foster, Jonathan Geisler, William Gropp, Nick Karonis, Ewing Lusk, George K. Thiruvathukal, and Steve Tuecke. A Wide-Area implementation of the message passing interface. Parallel Computing, 24(12):1735{1749, 1998.
PY - 1998/1/1
Y1 - 1998/1/1
N2 - The Message Passing Interface (MPI) can be used as a portable, high-performance programming model for wide-area computing systems. The wide-area environment introduces challenging problems for the MPI implementor, due to the heterogeneity of both the underlying physical infrastructure and the software environment at different sites. In this article, we describe an MPI implementation that incorporates solutions to these problems. This implementation has beenconstructed by extending the Argonne MPICH implementation of MPI to use communicationservices provided by the Nexus communication library and authentication, resource allocation, process creation/management, and information services provided by the I-Soft system (initially) and the Globus metacomputing toolkit (work in progress). Nexus provides multimethod communication mechanisms that allow multiple communication methods to be used in a single computation with a uniform interface; I-Soft and Globus provided standard authentication,resource management, and process management mechanisms. We describe how these various mechanisms are supported in the Nexus implementation of MPI and present performance resultsfor this implementation on multicomputers and networked systems. We also discuss how more advanced services provided by the Globus metacomputing toolkit are being used to construct a second-generation wide-area MPI.
AB - The Message Passing Interface (MPI) can be used as a portable, high-performance programming model for wide-area computing systems. The wide-area environment introduces challenging problems for the MPI implementor, due to the heterogeneity of both the underlying physical infrastructure and the software environment at different sites. In this article, we describe an MPI implementation that incorporates solutions to these problems. This implementation has beenconstructed by extending the Argonne MPICH implementation of MPI to use communicationservices provided by the Nexus communication library and authentication, resource allocation, process creation/management, and information services provided by the I-Soft system (initially) and the Globus metacomputing toolkit (work in progress). Nexus provides multimethod communication mechanisms that allow multiple communication methods to be used in a single computation with a uniform interface; I-Soft and Globus provided standard authentication,resource management, and process management mechanisms. We describe how these various mechanisms are supported in the Nexus implementation of MPI and present performance resultsfor this implementation on multicomputers and networked systems. We also discuss how more advanced services provided by the Globus metacomputing toolkit are being used to construct a second-generation wide-area MPI.
KW - MPI
KW - computer science
UR - https://ecommons.luc.edu/cs_facpubs/38
U2 - 10.1016/S0167-8191(98)00075-1
DO - 10.1016/S0167-8191(98)00075-1
M3 - Article
VL - 24
JO - Computer Science: Faculty Publications and Other Works
JF - Computer Science: Faculty Publications and Other Works
IS - 12
ER -