Daniel M. Bikel, Vittorio Castelli
ACL 2008
Parallel processing is well established in high-performance computing. Currently, network processors as new emerging, special-purpose processors are targeted at the exploitation of parallelism to meet the requirements in data-plane processing with wire-speed. The achievable level of parallelism is determined by decisions in the architecture design and by the characteristics of the data-plane applications executed. We discuss two basic approaches in parallel processing, namely pipelining and concurrency, which establish basic models for parallel network processor organization. The features and constraints of these models are studied. Using this background some existing network processor architectures are reviewed and characterized regarding their potential in parallel data-plane processing.
Daniel M. Bikel, Vittorio Castelli
ACL 2008
Thomas M. Cover
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
Charles H. Bennett, Aram W. Harrow, et al.
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
Raghu Krishnapuram, Krishna Kummamuru
IFSA 2003