S.B. Mohammad, M.O. Khaoua, L.M. Mackenzie, and I. Ababneh
Multicomputers, fragmentation, scheduling effectiveness, turnaround time, external message interference, dispersal ratio
Contiguous allocation of parallel jobs usually suffers from the degrading effects of fragmentation, because it requires that the allocated processors be contiguous and have the same topology as the network topology connecting these processors. This paper suggests two non-contiguous processor allocation strategies, referred to as Paging and Greedy-Available respectively, for the 3D mesh network and compares their performance using software simulation against the well-known contiguous First Fit strategy. The comparative evaluation is conducted for two job scheduling strategies, notably first-come-first-served (FCFS) and out-of-order (OO). The results reveal that our proposed non-contiguous strategies exhibit superior performance properties despite the added contention that results from non-contiguity. The results also reveal that the scheduling and allocation strategies both have substantial effect on the performance of contiguous and non-contiguous allocation in that the OO scheduling strategy leads to much better performance than its FCFS counterpart in the 3D mesh.
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