LIA: latency-improved adaptive routing for dragonfly networks
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Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10902/37941DOI: 10.1145/3711914
ISSN: 1544-3566
ISSN: 1544-3973
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2025-03-21Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization, 2025, 22(1), 39
Editorial
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Networks
Network simulations
Data center networks
Topology analysis and generation
Routing protocols
Intermediate nodes
Valiant routing
Non-minimal adaptive routing
Non-minimal path shortening
LIA
Dragonfly
Resumen/Abstract
Low-diameter network topologies require non-minimal routing, such as Valiant routing, to avoid network congestion under challenging traffic patterns like the so-called adversarial. However, this mechanism tends to increase the average path length, base latency, and network load. The use of shorter non-minimal paths has the potential to enhance performance, but it may also introduce congestion depending on the traffic patterns. This article introduces LIA (Latency-Improved Adaptive), a routing mechanism for Dragonfly networks which dynamically exploits minimal and non-minimal paths. LIA harnesses the traffic counters already present in contemporary switches to determine when it is safe to shorten non-minimal paths and to adjust routing decisions based on their information about the network conditions. Evaluations reveal that LIA achieves nearly optimal latency, outperforming state-of-the-art adaptive routing mechanisms by reducing latency by up to 30% while maintaining stable throughput and fairness.
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