Thomas M. Cheng
IT Professional
This paper studies the problem of deadlock-free packet routing in parallel and distributed architectures. Three main results are presented. First, it is shown that the standard technique of ordering the buffers so that every packet always has the possibility of moving to a higher-ordered buffer is not necessary for deadlock freedom. Second, it is shown that every deadlock-free, adaptive packet routing algorithm can be restricted, by limiting the adaptivity available, to obtain an oblivious algorithm which is also deadlock-free. Third, it is shown that any packet routing algorithm for a cycle or torus network which is free of deadlock and which uses only minimal length paths must require at least three buffers in some node. This matches the known upper bound of three buffers per node for deadlock-free, minimal packet routing on cycle and torus networks.
Thomas M. Cheng
IT Professional
Beomseok Nam, Henrique Andrade, et al.
ACM/IEEE SC 2006
Michael Ray, Yves C. Martin
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Chi-Leung Wong, Zehra Sura, et al.
I-SPAN 2002