Proceedings IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing CLUSTR-03 2003
DOI: 10.1109/clustr.2003.1253323
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Implications of a PIM architectural model for MPI

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…Several simulators have been developed to generate performance estimates for highperformance computing architectures. These range from high-fidelity and computationally expensive simulators for measuring performance between two nodes (Rodrigues et al, 2003;Underwood, Levenhagen, & Rodrigues, 2007) to lower-fidelity and lower-cost simulators that can estimate performance on large-scale machines. These lower-fidelity simulators use a variety of approaches to generate the application's processor and network workload including tracing, direct execution, and the use of skeleton applications.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…Several simulators have been developed to generate performance estimates for highperformance computing architectures. These range from high-fidelity and computationally expensive simulators for measuring performance between two nodes (Rodrigues et al, 2003;Underwood, Levenhagen, & Rodrigues, 2007) to lower-fidelity and lower-cost simulators that can estimate performance on large-scale machines. These lower-fidelity simulators use a variety of approaches to generate the application's processor and network workload including tracing, direct execution, and the use of skeleton applications.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our work is done in the context of a larger project to develop a parallel multi-scale simulator that permits users of the simulator to select the desired level of fidelity for each component of the machine. This larger project is an outgrowth of the Structural Simulation Toolkit (SST) (Rodrigues et al, 2003;Underwood et al, 2007) and the macro-scale components described herein will be referred to as SST/ macro to distinguish them from the existing micro-scale SST components.…”
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confidence: 99%