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Journal Article

Citation

Grandison AJ, Galea ER, Patel MK, Ewer J. J. Appl. Fire Sci. 2003; 12(2): 137-157.

Affiliation

Fire Safety Engineering Group, University of Greenwich, London, United Kingdom

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Parallel processing techniques have been used in the past to provide high performance computing resources for activities such as fire-field modelling. This has traditionally been achieved using specialized hardware and software, the expense of which would be difficult to justify for many fire engineering practices. In this article we demonstrate how typical office-based PCs attached to a Local Area Network has the potential to offer the benefits of parallel processing with minimal costs associated with the purchase of additional hardware or software. It was found that good speedups could be achieved on homogeneous networks of PCs, for example a problem composed of [similar to] 100,000 cells would run 9.3 times faster on a network of 12 800MHz PCs than on a single 800MHz PC. It was also found that a network of eight 3.2GHz Pentium 4 PCs would run 7.04 times faster than a single 3.2GHz Pentium computer. A dynamic load balancing scheme was also devised to allow the effective use of the software on heterogeneous PC networks. This scheme also ensured that the impact between the parallel processing task and other computer users on the network was minimized.

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