• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 1 - 10 of 22,045
Next 10 →

Table 1: Maximum switch throughput versus number of switch input and output ports for input- queued packet switches (load = 100 %, buffer size = 1000).

in A Traffic Policing Approach To Assure Acceptable Grade Of Service In Packet Networks
by Peter Homan, Janez Bester, Mag Peter Homan, Dr. Janez Bešter
"... In PAGE 5: ...6 %). The presentation of simulation results is concluded with Table1 , where maximum switch throughput values for different switch sizes can be found. All four scheduling mechanisms are compared.... ..."

TABLE III COMPARISON BETWEEN 1-INPUT 5-OUTPUT SWITCH AND 1-INPUT 7-OUTPUT SWITCH.

in A Parametric Study of Scalable Interconnects on FPGAs
by Daihan Wang, Hiroki Matsutani, Masato Yoshimi, Michihiro Koibuchi, Hideharu Amano

TABLE I EXPECTATION OF SWITCHING IN L BIT INPUT

in Low-power multipliers with data wordlength reduction
by Kyungtae Han, Brian L. Evans, Earl E. Swartzl 2005
Cited by 1

Table 1. Table 1: Bit Energy Under Different Input Vectors Switch Fabric Input Bit Input Bit

in Analysis of Power Consumption on Switch Fabrics in Network Routers
by Terry Tao Ye, Luca Benini, Giovanni De Micheli 2002
Cited by 31

Table 3.1: Bit Energy Under Different Input Vectors Switch Fabric Input Bit Input Bit

in On-Chip Multiprocessor Communication . . .
by Terry Tao Ye 2001
Cited by 1

Table 17: Performance of the very high speed switch with input and output bu#0Bers. Cell

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 18: Performance of the very high speed switch with input and crosspoint bu#0Bers.

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 4.1: Expectation of switching in L bit input Inputs Expectation of switching

in Copyright by
by Kyungtae Han, Brian L. Evans, Ross Baldick, Margarida F. Jacome, Earl E. Swartzlander, Robert A. Van De Geijn 2006

Table 1: Maximum throughput of Non-blocking Packet Switch with input and output queueing (N = 1) using FIFO queues Speedup Maximum Throughput

in Scheduling in Input Queued Switches: A Survey
by Pankaj Gupta 1996
"... In PAGE 14: ... Some of the key observations highlighting the advantages of this combined approach are: Employing input queueing mechanism in an output queued switch greatly re- duces the speedup required to attain a given Ploss at a given load value. Employing a small speedup and output queueing in an input queued switch results in signi cant throughput improvements (see Table1 |from [66]) The backpressure mechanism requires less Bin + Bout to achieve a given Ploss under a very wide range of load values than the queue loss mechanism. Variable-length packet switching has not been considered in literature as much as time-slotted xed-length cell switching.... ..."
Cited by 2

TABLE I EVALUATION OF THE SWITCHED CAPACITANCE POLYNOMIAL FOR DIFFERENT INPUT PROBABILITIES.

in A Probabilistic Approach for RT-Level Power Modeling
by José Costa , José Monteiro, L. Miguel Silveira , Srinivas Devadas 1999
Cited by 3
Next 10 →
Results 1 - 10 of 22,045
Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University