Limits to Low-Latency Communication on High-Speed Networks (1993)
| Venue: | ACM Transactions on Computer Systems |
| Citations: | 95 - 3 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Thekkath93limitsto,
author = {Chandramohan A. Thekkath and Henry M. Levy},
title = {Limits to Low-Latency Communication on High-Speed Networks},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Computer Systems},
year = {1993},
volume = {11},
pages = {179--203}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
The throughput of local area networks is rapidly increasing. For example, the bandwidth of new ATM networks and FDDI token rings is an order of magnitude greater than that of Ethernets. Other network technologies promise a bandwidth increase of yet another order of magnitude in a few years. However, in distributed systems, lowered latency rather than increased throughput is often of primary concern. This paper examines the system-level effects of newer high-speed network technologies on low-latency, cross-machine communications. To evaluate a number of influences, both hardware and software, we designed and imple-mented a new remote procedure call system targeted at providing low latency. We then ported this system to several hardware platforms (DECstation and SPARCstation) with several differ-ent networks and controllers (ATM, FDDI, and Ethernet). Comparing these systems allows us to explore the performance impact of alternative designs in the communication system with respect to achieving low latency, e.g., the network, the network controller, the host architecture and cache system, and the kernel and user-level runtime software. Our RPC system, which achieves substantially reduced call times (170 pseconds on an ATM network using DECstation 5000/200 hosts), allow us to isolate those components of next-







