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Impact of Load Balancing on Unstructured Adaptive Grid Computations for Distributed-Memory MultiprocessorsThe computational requirements for an adaptive solution of unsteady problems change as the simulation progresses. This causes workload imbalance among processors on a parallel machine which, in turn, requires significant data movement at runtime. We present a new dynamic load-balancing framework, called JOVE, that balances the workload across all processors with a global view. Whenever the computational mesh is adapted, JOVE is activated to eliminate the load imbalance. JOVE has been implemented on an IBM SP2 distributed-memory machine in MPI for portability. Experimental results for two model meshes demonstrate that mesh adaption with load balancing gives more than a sixfold improvement over one without load balancing. We also show that JOVE gives a 24-fold speedup on 64 processors compared to sequential execution.
Document ID
19970009334
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Sohn, Andrew
(New Jersey Inst. of Tech. Newark, NJ United States)
Biswas, Rupak
(Research Inst. for Advanced Computer Science Moffett Field, CA United States)
Simon, Horst D.
(National Energy Research Supercomputer Center Livermore, CA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
September 1, 1996
Subject Category
Computer Systems
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.15:112034
NASA-TM-112034
NAS-96-012
Report Number: NAS 1.15:112034
Report Number: NASA-TM-112034
Report Number: NAS-96-012
Meeting Information
Meeting: IEEE Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Processing (SPDP''96)
Location: New Orleans, LA
Country: United States
Start Date: October 23, 1996
End Date: October 26, 1996
Accession Number
97N14825
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS2-14303
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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