Publication | Open Access
Performing out-of-core FFTs on parallel disk systems
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Citations
18
References
1998
Year
Cluster ComputingComputational ScienceMassively-parallel ComputingEngineeringOptimal Pdm AlgorithmParallel ProcessingParallel Performance EvaluationMany-core ArchitectureComputer EngineeringComputer ArchitectureExternal-memory AlgorithmParallel ProgrammingComputer ScienceOptimal AlgorithmParallel ComputingData-level ParallelismFast Fourier TransformParallel Disk Systems
The Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) plays a key role in many areas of computational science and engineering. Although most one-dimensional FFT problems can be solved entirely in main memory, some important classes of applications require out-of-core techniques. For these, use of parallel I/O systems can improve performance considerably. This paper shows how to perform one-dimensional FFTs using a parallel disk system with independent disk accesses. We present both analytical and experimental results for performing out-of-core FFTs in two ways: using traditional virtual memory with demand paging, and using a provably asymptotically optimal algorithm for the Parallel Disk Model (PDM) of Vitter and Shriver. When run on a DEC 2100 server with a large memory and eight parallel disks, the optimal algorithm for the PDM runs up to 144.7 times faster than in-core methods under demand paging. Moreover, even including I/O costs, the normalized times for the optimal PDM algorithm are competitive, or better than, those for in-core methods even when they run entirely in memory.
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