Abstract
The importance of adapting networks of workstations for use as parallel processing platforms is well established. However current solutions do not always address important issues that exist in networks. External factors like the sharing of resources, unpredictable behavior of the network and failures, are present in multiuser networks and must be addressed. CALYPSO is a prototype software system for writing and executing parallel programs on non-dedicated platforms, based on COTS networked workstations operating systems, and compilers. Among notable properties of the system are: (1) simple programming paradigm incorporating shared memory constructs and separating the programming and the execution parallelism, (2) transparent utilization of unreliable shared resources by providing dynamic load balancing and fault tolerance, and (3) effective performance for large classes of coarse-grained computations. We present the system and report our initial experiments and performance results in settings that closely resemble the dynamic behavior of a real network. Under varying work-load conditions, resource availability and process failures, the efficiency of the test program we present ranged from 84% to 94% bench-marked against a sequential program.
Published Version
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