The fat tree network is a universal network for provably efficient communication.[1] It was invented by Charles E. Leiserson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985.[1] k-ary n-trees, the type of fat-trees commonly used in most high-performance networks, were initially formalized in 1997.[2]

A fat tree
A 2-level fat tree with 8-port switches

In a tree data structure, every branch has the same thickness (bandwidth), regardless of their place in the hierarchy—they are all "skinny" (skinny in this context means low-bandwidth). In a fat tree, branches nearer the top of the hierarchy are "fatter" (thicker) than branches further down the hierarchy. In a telecommunications network, the branches are data links; the varied thickness (bandwidth) of the data links allows for more efficient and technology-specific use.[citation needed]

Mesh and hypercube topologies have communication requirements that follow a rigid algorithm, and cannot be tailored to specific packaging technologies.[3]

Applications in supercomputers

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Supercomputers that use a fat tree network[4] include the two fastest as of late 2018,[5] Summit[6] and Sierra,[7] as well as Tianhe-2,[8] the Meiko Scientific CS-2, Yellowstone, the Earth Simulator, the Cray X2, the Connection Machine CM-5, and various Altix supercomputers.[citation needed]

Mercury Computer Systems applied a variant of the fat tree topology—the hypertree network—to their multicomputers.[citation needed] In this architecture, 2 to 360 compute nodes are arranged in a circuit-switched fat tree network.[citation needed] Each node has local memory that can be mapped by any other node.[vague] Each node in this heterogeneous system could be an Intel i860, a PowerPC, or a group of three SHARC digital signal processors.[citation needed]

The fat tree network was particularly well suited to fast Fourier transform computations, which customers used for such signal processing tasks as radar, sonar, and medical imaging.[citation needed]

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In August 2008, a team of computer scientists at UCSD published a scalable design for network architecture[9] that uses a topology inspired by the fat tree topology to realize networks that scale better than those of previous hierarchical networks. The architecture uses commodity switches that are cheaper and more power-efficient than high-end modular data center switches.

This topology is actually a special instance of a Clos network, rather than a fat-tree as described above. That is because the edges near the root are emulated by many links to separate parents instead of a single high-capacity link to a single parent. However, many authors continue to use the term in this way.

References

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  1. ^ a b Leiserson, Charles E (October 1985). "Fat-trees: universal networks for hardware-efficient supercomputing" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Computers. 34 (10): 892–901. doi:10.1109/TC.1985.6312192. S2CID 8927584.
  2. ^ Petrini, Fabrizio (1997). "K-ary n-trees: High performance networks for massively parallel architectures". Proceedings 11th International Parallel Processing Symposium. Vol. doi: 10.1109/IPPS.1997.580853. pp. 87–93. doi:10.1109/IPPS.1997.580853. ISBN 0-8186-7793-7. S2CID 6608892.
  3. ^ Leiserson, Charles E.; Abuhamdeh, Zahi S.; Douglas, David C.; Feynman, Carl R.; Ganmukhi, Mahesh N.; Hill, Jeffrey V.; Daniel Hillis, W.; Kuszmaul, Bradley C.; St. Pierre, Margaret A.; Wells, David S.; Wong, Monica C.; Yang, Shaw-Wen; Zak, Robert (1992). "The Network Architecture of the Connection Machine CM-5". SPAA '92 Proceedings of the fourth annual ACM symposium on Parallel algorithms and architectures. ACM. pp. 272–285. doi:10.1145/140901.141883. ISBN 978-0-89791-483-3. S2CID 6307237.
  4. ^ Yuefan Deng (2013). "3.2.1 Hardware systems: Network Interconnections: Topology". Applied Parallel Computing. World Scientific. p. 25. ISBN 978-981-4307-60-4.
  5. ^ "November 2018 TOP500". TOP500. November 2018. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  6. ^ "Summit - Oak Ridge National Laboratory's next High Performance Supercomputer". Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  7. ^ Barney, Blaise (2019-01-18). "Using LC's Sierra Systems - Hardware - Mellanox EDR InfiniBand Network - Topology and LC Sierra Configuration". Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
  8. ^ Dongarra, Jack (2013-06-03). "Visit to the National University for Defense Technology Changsha, China" (PDF). Netlib. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
  9. ^ Al-Fares, Mohammad; Loukissas, Alexander; Vahdat, Amin (2008). "A scalable, commodity data center network architecture" (PDF). Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM 2008 conference on Data communication. ACM. pp. 63–74. doi:10.1145/1402958.1402967. ISBN 978-1-60558-175-0. S2CID 65842.

Further reading

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