Application of hybrid computing technologies for high-performance distributed NFV systems

Author(s):  
Mikhail M. Rovnyagin ◽  
Alexey A. Kuznetsov
Author(s):  
Vadim Kondrashev ◽  
Sergey Denisov

The paper discusses methods and algorithms for the provision of high-performance computing resources in multicomputer systems in a shared mode for fundamental and applied research in the field of materials science. Approaches are proposed for the application of applied integrated software environments (frameworks) designed to solve material science problems using virtualization and parallel computing technologies.


2011 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 177-181
Author(s):  
M.O. Alieksieiev ◽  
L.S. Hloba ◽  
K.O. Yermakova ◽  
V.V. Kushnir

The usage of high-performance computing technologies in the areas of scientific and engineering researches is considered. The method of the effective data processing paralleling is described. The using of high-performance computing based on the OpenMP library for solving problems in the field of Telecommunication, e.g. computation of the queues QoS parameters, is also analyzed


Author(s):  
Damien Gratadour ◽  
James Osborn ◽  
Hugues Deneux ◽  
Roberto Biasi ◽  
Denis Perret ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Hao Wang ◽  
Ce Yu ◽  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Jian Xiao ◽  
Qi Luo

Abstract Gridding operation, which is to map non-uniform data samples on to a uniformly distributed grid, is one of the key steps in radio astronomical data reduction process. One of the main bottlenecks of gridding is the poor computing performance, and a typical solution for such performance issue is the implementation of multi-core CPU platforms. Although such a method could usually achieve good results, in many cases, the performance of gridding is still restricted to an extent due to the limitations of CPU, since the main workload of gridding is a combination of a large number of single instruction, multi-data-stream operations, which is more suitable for GPU, rather than CPU implementations. To meet the challenge of massive data gridding for the modern large single-dish radio telescopes, e.g. the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST), inspired by existing multi-core CPU gridding algorithms such as Cygrid, here we present an easy-to-install, high-performance, and open-source convolutional gridding framework, HCGrid, in CPU-GPU heterogeneous platforms. It optimises data search by employing multi-threading on CPU, and accelerates the convolution process by utilising massive parallelisation of GPU. In order to make HCGrid a more adaptive solution, we also propose the strategies of thread organisation and coarsening, as well as optimal parameter settings under various GPU architectures. A thorough analysis of computing time and performance gain with several GPU parallel optimisation strategies show that it can lead to excellent performance in hybrid computing environments.


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