Second NASA/ESA Conference on Adaptive Hardware and Systems (AHS 2007) 2007
DOI: 10.1109/ahs.2007.71
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Maxwell - a 64 FPGA Supercomputer

Abstract: We present the initial results from the FHPCA Supercomputer project at the University of Edinburgh. The project has successfully built a general-purpose 64 FPGA computer and ported to it three demonstration applications from the oil, medical and finance sectors. This paper describes in brief the machine itselfMaxwell -its hardware and software environment and presents very early benchmark results from runs of the demonstrators.

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Cited by 91 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Maxwell [3] used a 2-D torus interconnect between 64 FPGAS to explore whether an FPGA-based cluster could support many types of high-performance computing applications. Each link in the interconnect used a single multi-gigabit transceiver.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maxwell [3] used a 2-D torus interconnect between 64 FPGAS to explore whether an FPGA-based cluster could support many types of high-performance computing applications. Each link in the interconnect used a single multi-gigabit transceiver.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A line of special purpose development boards based on such FPGAs are also available(e.g. Nallatech and Alpha data) which are particularly suitable for HPC; some of these come with tools which help faster algorithm-to-hardware realization with high-level C-like constructs; Maxwell [1,2], a FPGA parallel computer, is a good example of a system built around such hardware/software ecosystem.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the off-chip bandwidth of VS achieves 3,192 MB/s via six-way channels with 3D connections. This is higher than Maxwell [7], where in the FPGA Board connects to the CPU using a PCI/PCI-X bridge that is capable of 64-bit, 133 MHz operation in PCI-X mode. The configuration has a peak bandwidth of 600 MB/s, which is a potential performance bottleneck for Maxwell.…”
Section: Fpga Arraymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many parallel computing systems with multi-FPGAs have been developed, such as Maxwell [7], the Berkeley Emulation Engine (BEE) [8], Cube [9], programmable active memory (PAM) [10], and the systolic computationalmemory array (SCMA) [11]. The third-generation BEE (BEE3) comprises modules with four Virtex-5 FPGAs connected by ring interconnection.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%