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Efficient Algorithms for Dynamic Allocation of Distributed Memory
Authors:T Leighton  E J Schwabe
Affiliation:(1) Department of Mathematics, and Laboratory for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 545 Technology Square, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. ftl@math.mit.edu., US;(2) School of CTI, DePaul University, 243 S. Wabash Avenue, Chicago, IL 60604, USA. eschwabe@cs.depaul.edu., US
Abstract:We consider the problem of dynamically allocating and deallocating local memory resources among multiple users in a parallel or distributed system. Given a group of independent users and a collection of interconnected local memory devices, we want to render the fragmentation of the memory resources irrelevant by allowing any user to allocate space for his or her purposes as long as there is space available anywhere in the system. In effect, we would like it to appear to the users as though they are allocating memory from a single central pool of memory, even though the space is distributed throughout the system. Our goal is to devise an on-line allocation algorithm that minimizes two cost measures: first, the fraction of unused space , which arises due to fragmentation of the memory; second, the slowdown needed by the system to service user requests, which arises due to the contention for access to the memory devices. We solve this distributed dynamic allocation problem in near-optimal fashion by devising an algorithm that allows the memory to be used to 100% of capacity despite the fragmentation and guarantees that service delays will always be within a constant factor of optimal. The algorithm is completely on-line (no foreknowledge of user activity is assumed) and can accommodate any sequence of allocations and deallocations by the users that does not violate global memory bounds. We also consider the distributed dynamic allocation problem in the more restrictive setting where the local memory devices are connected by a low-degree fixed-connection network, rather than being fully interconnected. In this case, communication costs must be more explicitly considered in our allocation algorithms. We give allocation algorithms for butterfly and hypercube networks, and prove necessary and sufficient conditions on the total amount of memory space needed for near-optimal algorithms to exist. Received November 5, 1996; revised December 10, 1997.
Keywords:, Dynamic allocation, Memory allocation, Parallel and distributed systems, Allocation algorithms,
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