Overview of the SpiNNaker system architecture

Steven Temple, Andrew D. Brown

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

    Abstract

    SpiNNaker (a contraction of Spiking Neural Network Architecture) is a million-core computing engine whose flagship goal is to be able to simulate the behaviour of aggregates of up to a billion neurons in real time. It consists of an array of ARM9 cores, communicating via packets carried by a custom interconnect fabric. The packets are small (40 or 72 bits), and their transmission is brokered entirely by hardware, giving the overall engine an extremely high bisection bandwidth of over 5 billion packets/s. Three of the principle axioms of parallel machine design -- memory coherence, synchronicity and determinism -- have been discarded in the design without, surprisingly, compromising the ability to perform meaningful computations. A further attribute of the system is the acknowledgement, from the initial design stages, that the sheer size of the implementation will make component failures an inevitable aspect of day-to-day operation, and fault detection and recovery mechanisms have been built into the system at many levels of abstraction. This paper describes the architecture of the machine and outlines the underlying design philosophy; software and applications are to be described in detail elsewhere, and only introduced in passing here as necessary to illuminate the description
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationIEEE
    PublisherIEEE
    Pages49 - 56
    Number of pages8
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

    Keywords

    • Computer Systems Organization

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