The EcliPSe Simulation System

Principal Investigators: Vernon J. Rego, Vaidy Sunderam (Emory University)

Research Assistant: F. Knop

Sponsors: ONR DoE PRF

The EcliPSe project originated at the Oak Ridge National Labs in the summer of 1990. The intent was to experimentally demonstrate that a heterogeneous network environment could be viewed as a massively parallel processor for a variety of computations, in particular for simulation and domain-specific computations. Using a few simple but pragmatic rules, we designed and built a fault-tolerant software environment for network-based computing. The EcliPSe project was awarded the 1992 Gordon Bell Prize for price/performance, based on a superconcurrent polymer chain simulation which simultaneously utilized about 200 heterogeneous machines dispersed across the U.S.

For more information please see http://www.cs.purdue.edu/research/PaCS/PaCS.html

1998
Annual Research Report

Department of
Computer Sciences