Supplement Buzz
Vitamins
Health
Nutrition
Dietary
Supplements
Information
Site Map
Other Links





Tags:

energy fish oil fiber protein reviews menopause hgh omega muscle nutritional dietary msm cla nitric oxide pet magnesium calcium creatine collagen bodybuilding supplement fiber vitamin testosterone thyroid iron body potassium dog loss dhea sports health hoodia iodine amino best weight weight loss natural supplement gain mineral nutrition sports diet zinc food herbal horse

     RSS Feed http://www.supplementbuzz.com/rss.xml


Revival Soy 100% Great Taste Guarantee

 
   

Disk-Based Parallel Computation, Rubik's Cube, and Checkpointing

Back


Google Tech Talks March, 24 2008 ABSTRACT This talk takes us on a journey through three varied, but interconnected topics. First, our research lab has engaged in a series of disk-based computations extending over five years. Disks have traditionally been used for filesystems, for virtual memory, and for databases. Disk-based computation opens up an important fourth use: an abstraction for multiple disks that allows parallel programs to treat them in a manner similar to RAM. The key observation is that 50 disks have approximately the same parallel bandwidth as a _single_ RAM subsystem. This leaves latency as the primary concern. A second key is the use of techniques like delayed duplicate detection to avoid latency. For example, hash accesses accesses can be saved (even saved on disk), until there are sufficiently many pending accesses to use standard streaming techniques. We have designed a library for search problems that exploits the high parallel bandwidth while hiding the latency. We build abstractions for search that employ parallel disk-based hash arrays with the same speed as a single hash array in a single RAM subsystem. In the case of Rubik's cube, we exploited this mechanism by using seven terabytes of distributed disk in a search problem that showed that 26 moves suffice to solve Rubik's cube. Our initial efforts emphasize idempotent operations, so that we can easily recover from hardware or software faults. We next intend to apply a more general solution for fault recovery: checkpointing. This separate effort in our lab has now produced a mature, robust user-level checkpointing program has now matured. The package works successfully in tests on OpenMPI, MPICH-2, OpenMP, and parallel iPython (used in SciPy and NumPy). Our DMTCP package transparently checkpoints parallel, multi-threaded processes, with no modification either to the operating system or to the application binaries. Extrapolating from current experiments, we estimate that we can checkpoint a 1,000 node parallel computation in a matter of minutes. We are currently searching for a testbed on which to demonstrate this scalability. Speaker: Gene Cooperman

Channel: People & Blogs
Uploaded: March 25, 2008 at 2:07 am
Author: googletechtalks

Length: 1:13:53
Rating: 4.40
Views: 7,530

Tags: google techtalks techtalk engedu talk talks googletechtalks education

Video Thumbnail #1:




Video Thumbnail #2:




Video Thumbnail #3:




Video Url:


Embed Code:


Video Comments:
wires0 (Wednesday 15th of October 2008 05:31:36 PM)
Awesome lecture, great speaker, very creative and hardcore research. I enjoyed it...
7539121 (Thursday 7th of August 2008 06:34:43 AM)
uh uh uh uh
shibanosaca (Wednesday 16th of July 2008 10:36:27 PM)
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz zzzzzzz zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
TheCheeseMan02 (Monday 14th of April 2008 03:03:24 PM)
un... hi
 
 
 

Partners : Turquoise Jewelry Free Insurance Quote  Cheap Plane Tickets
Supplementbuzz.com Copyright © 2008 All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy