A self-describing data transfer model for ITS applications

2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 293-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.J. Dailey ◽  
S. Maclean ◽  
F.W. Cathey ◽  
D. Meyers
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Xiaohan Tao ◽  
Jianmin Pang ◽  
Jinlong Xu ◽  
Yu Zhu

AbstractThe heterogeneous many-core architecture plays an important role in the fields of high-performance computing and scientific computing. It uses accelerator cores with on-chip memories to improve performance and reduce energy consumption. Scratchpad memory (SPM) is a kind of fast on-chip memory with lower energy consumption compared with a hardware cache. However, data transfer between SPM and off-chip memory can be managed only by a programmer or compiler. In this paper, we propose a compiler-directed multithreaded SPM data transfer model (MSDTM) to optimize the process of data transfer in a heterogeneous many-core architecture. We use compile-time analysis to classify data accesses, check dependences and determine the allocation of data transfer operations. We further present the data transfer performance model to derive the optimal granularity of data transfer and select the most profitable data transfer strategy. We implement the proposed MSDTM on the GCC complier and evaluate it on Sunway TaihuLight with selected test cases from benchmarks and scientific computing applications. The experimental result shows that the proposed MSDTM improves the application execution time by 5.49$$\times$$ × and achieves an energy saving of 5.16$$\times$$ × on average.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Toy ◽  
Gehan Gunasekara

The data transfer model and the accountability model, which are the dominant models for protecting the data privacy rights of citizens, have begun to present significant difficulties in regulating the online and increasingly transnational business environment. Global organisations take advantage of forum selection clauses and choice of law clauses and attention is diverted toward the data transfer model and the accountability model as a means of data privacy protection but it is impossible to have confidence that the data privacy rights of citizens are adequately protected given well known revelations regarding surveillance and the rise of technologies such as cloud computing. But forum selection and choice of law clauses no longer have the force they once seemed to have and this opens the possibility that extraterritorial jurisdiction may provide a supplementary conceptual basis for championing data privacy in the globalised context of the Internet. This article examines the current basis for extraterritorial application of data privacy laws and suggests a test for increasing their relevance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 103174
Author(s):  
Zhangqin Huang ◽  
Shuo Zhang ◽  
Han Gao ◽  
Xiaobo Zhang ◽  
Shengqi Yang

2012 ◽  
Vol 538-541 ◽  
pp. 2735-2738
Author(s):  
Hai Xia Gu

The project and techniques of driving rapid prototyping (RP) machine within CAD system were researched to avoid the precision decreasement of the data transfer from CAD to RP system. The method of achieving the layer’s contour scanning data within CAD system was researched; then, the data transfer model of direct integration of CAD and RP was established; finally, tests were conducted on a polystyrene foam cutter machine with example of layer generation. Tests show that the approximate processing to 3D CAD model can be avoided during data transfer between CAD and RP, and RP machine can be driven and controlled within CAD system.


2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 820-827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie J. Davis ◽  
Sravan Thokala ◽  
Xinyu Xing ◽  
N. Thompson Hobbs ◽  
Daniel P. Walsh ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
M.F. Schmid ◽  
R. Dargahi ◽  
M. W. Tam

Electron crystallography is an emerging field for structure determination as evidenced by a number of membrane proteins that have been solved to near-atomic resolution. Advances in specimen preparation and in data acquisition with a 400kV microscope by computer controlled spot scanning mean that our ability to record electron image data will outstrip our capacity to analyze it. The computed fourier transform of these images must be processed in order to provide a direct measurement of amplitudes and phases needed for 3-D reconstruction.In anticipation of this processing bottleneck, we have written a program that incorporates a menu-and mouse-driven procedure for auto-indexing and refining the reciprocal lattice parameters in the computed transform from an image of a crystal. It is linked to subsequent steps of image processing by a system of data bases and spawned child processes; data transfer between different program modules no longer requires manual data entry. The progress of the reciprocal lattice refinement is monitored visually and quantitatively. If desired, the processing is carried through the lattice distortion correction (unbending) steps automatically.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document