X-Git-Url: https://bilbo.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/and/gitweb/hpcc2014.git/blobdiff_plain/7ec471dd9a97eba2f485ebc6c130f4f289b59793..91737d8c90e13c84651baade5d00b5c18d79242c:/hpcc.tex diff --git a/hpcc.tex b/hpcc.tex index 34c35a7..295f384 100644 --- a/hpcc.tex +++ b/hpcc.tex @@ -508,7 +508,8 @@ $\text{62}^\text{3} = \text{\np{238328}}$ to $\text{150}^\text{3} = \begin{table}[!t] \centering - \caption{2 clusters, each with 50 nodes} + \caption{Relative gain of the multisplitting algorithm compared to GMRES for + different configurations with 2 clusters, each one composed of 50 nodes.} \label{tab.cluster.2x50} \begin{mytable}{5} @@ -656,10 +657,10 @@ Note that the program was run with the following parameters: After analyzing the outputs, generally, for the two clusters including one hundred hosts configuration (Tables~\ref{tab.cluster.2x50}), some combinations of parameters affecting the results have given a relative gain more than 2.5, showing the effectiveness of the -asynchronous performance compared to the synchronous mode. +asynchronous multisplitting compared to GMRES with two distant clusters. With these settings, Table~\ref{tab.cluster.2x50} shows -that after a deterioration of inter cluster network with a bandwidth of \np[Mbit/s]{5} and a latency in order of one hundredth of millisecond and a processor power +that after setting the bandwidth of the inter cluster network to \np[Mbit/s]{5} and a latency in order of one hundredth of millisecond and a processor power of one GFlops, an efficiency of about \np[\%]{40} is obtained in asynchronous mode for a matrix size of 62 elements. It is noticed that the result remains stable even we vary the residual error precision from \np{E-5} to \np{E-9}. By