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Speedup

(Redirected from Linear speedup)

In parallel computing, speedup refers to how much a parallel algorithm is faster than a corresponding sequential algorithm.

It is defined by the following formula:

S_p = \frac{T_1}{T_p}

where:

Linear speedup or ideal speedup is obtained when \,S_p = p. When running an algorithm with linear speedup, doubling the number of processors doubles the speed, which is usually considered very good scalability.

Efficiency is a performance metric defined as Sp/p. It is a value, typically between zero and one, estimating how well-utilized the processors are in solving the problem, compared to how much effort is wasted in communication and synchronization. Algorithms with linear speedup and algorithms running on a single processor have an efficiency of 1, while many difficult-to-parallelize algorithms have efficiency such as 1/log p that approaches zero as the number of processors increases.

See also

01-04-2007 01:16:19
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