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Abstract Pomegranate: A Fully Scalable Graphics Architecture (2008)

Abstract
Pomegranate is a parallel hardware architecture for polygon rendering that provides scalable input bandwidth, triangle rate, pixel rate, texture memory and display bandwidth while maintaining an immediate-mode interface. The basic unit of scalability is a single graphics pipeline, and up to 64 such units may be combined. Pomegranate’s scalability is achieved with a novel “sorteverywhere” architecture that distributes work in a balanced fashion at every stage of the pipeline, keeping the amount of work performed by each pipeline uniform as the system scales. Because of the balanced distribution, a scalable network based on high-speed point-to-point links can be used for communicating between the pipelines. Pomegranate uses the network to load balance triangle and fragment work independently, to provide a shared texture memory and to provide a scalable display system. The architecture provides one interface per pipeline for issuing ordered, immediate-mode rendering commands and supports a parallel API that allows multiprocessor applications to exactly order drawing commands from each interface. A detailed hardware simulation demonstrates performance on next-generation workloads. Pomegranate operates at 87–99% parallel efficiency with 64 pipelines, for a simulated performance of up to 1.10 billion triangles per second and 21.8 billion pixels per second.

Publication details
Download http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.84.6591
Source http://graphics.stanford.edu/papers/pomegranate/pomegranate.pdf
Contributors CiteSeerX
Repository CiteSeerX - Scientific Literature Digital Library and Search Engine (United States)
Keywords CR Categories, I.3.1 [Computer Graphics, Hardware Architecture—Parallel Processing Keywords, Graphics Hardware, Parallel Computing
Type text
Language English
Relation 10.1.1.6.3098, 10.1.1.127.8869, 10.1.1.43.2892, 10.1.1.17.1626, 10.1.1.19.1784, 10.1.1.22.3640, 10.1.1.6.2224