Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
CSE 291 Interconnection Networks Winter 2007 Lecture 6 February 5 2007 Prof. Chung-Kuan Cheng University of California San Diego
2
Circulant Networks G(n; S) Example: G(16; 1,4)
3
Circulant Network Properties 1. k-regular 2. Strongly connected iff it is connected 3. Strongly connected iff 4. Connectivity K(G)=k if G is connected and n is prime 5. Connectivity K(G)= if G is connected and n is not prime
4
Circulant Networks (cont.) k-ary n-fly Butterfly k-ary n-cube 1. n-regular 2. Connectivity k = n 3. Diameter n(d-1)
5
Pyramid Networks PN(n) is adjacent to 4 vertices at level i+1 Level i is a mesh Level 0 vertex (1,1,0) is the root
6
Pyramid Network Properties 1. 2. 3. Min degree = 3, max degree = 9 4. Diameter 2n … …… … … …
7
Butterfly Networks BN(n) iff x=y or x differs from y in precisely the (i+1)th bit level
8
Ω Networks iff (1) y is a left cyclic shift of x; or (2) y is a left cyclic shift of x and then change the last bit Remark: The routing is identical for all
9
Ω Network is isomorphic to Butterfly Network Ω(n) BF(n) Left shift & change the last bit Change the (i+1)th bit
10
Shuffle-Exchange Networks SE(n) and are adjacent iff (1) x & y differ in precisely the last digit; or (2) x is a left or right cyclic shift of y Properties: (1) (2) 3-regular (3) Diameter=2n-1
11
Circuit Switching Rearrangeable: connect all inputs & outputs when reroute is allowed Nonblocking in the wide sense: connect all new inputs & outputs if the routing is suitably performed Nonblocking in the strict sense: connect all new inputs & outputs with no assumptions on the routing
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.