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The Liquid Model Load Balancing Method

Title data

Henrich, Dominik:
The Liquid Model Load Balancing Method.
In: Parallel Algorithms and Applications. Vol. 8 (1996) Issue 3-4 . - pp. 285-307.
ISSN 1063-7192
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10637199608915558

Project information

Project title:
Project's official title
Project's id
LOADBAL
No information

Abstract in another language

Load balancing is one of the central problems that have to be solved in parallel computation. Here, the problem of distributed, dynamic load balancing for massive parallelism is addressed. A new local method, which realizes a physical analogy to equilibrating liquids in multi-dimensional tori or hypercubes, is presented. It is especially suited for communication mechanisms with low set-up to transfer ratio occurring in tightly-coupled or SIMD systems. By successive shifting single load elements to the direct neighbors, the load is automatically transferred to lightly loaded processors. Compared to former methods, the proposed Liquid model has two main advantages. First, the task of load sharing is combined with the task of load balancing, where the former has priority. This property is valuable in many applications and important for highly dynamic load distribution. Second, the Liquid model has high efficiency, Asymptotically, it needs O(D K Ldiff) load transfers to reach the balanced state in a D-dimensional torus with K processors per dimension and a maximum initial load difference of Ldiff. The Liquid model clearly outperforms an earlier load balancing approach, the nearest-neighbor-averaging. Besides a survey of related research, analytical results within a formal framework are derived. These results are validated by worst-case simulations in one- and two-dimeasional tori with up to two thousand processors.

Further data

Item Type: Article in a journal
Refereed: Yes
Institutions of the University: Faculties > Faculty of Mathematics, Physics und Computer Science > Department of Computer Science > Chair Applied Computer Science III > Chair Applied Computer Science III - Univ.-Prof. Dr. Dominik Henrich
Result of work at the UBT: No
DDC Subjects: 000 Computer Science, information, general works > 004 Computer science
Date Deposited: 12 Mar 2025 08:44
Last Modified: 12 Mar 2025 08:44
URI: https://eref.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/92799