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Modular programming of computing media using spatial types, for artificial physics

Authors :
Gruau, Frederic
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Our long term goal is to execute General Purpose computation on homogeneous computing media consisting of millions of small identical Processing Elements (PE) communicating locally. We proceed by simulating the Self-Development of a Network (SDN) of membranes, and this implies a medium able to implement artificial physics laws that simulates simplified membrane-agents, dividing and homogenizing. This is a difficult challenge: our current version of SDN-media uses PEs with 77 bits of state and 13878 gates. This high level of complexity forced us to work out an efficient and expressive scheme for programming the medium, the goal of this paper it to present it. The PE's communication graph has to be a maximal planar graph. Fields of bits are spread in 2D, over three locus: the vertices, edges and faces of this planar graph. They constitute three data types, which abstract away the ensemble of PEs. The simplicial proximity between bits is used to define operations on fields, thus implementing "{\it spatial type}". Expression combining operations can be translated in logical circuits. The efficiency is achieved because fields of different locus are combined using reduction operation. This allows to factorize computation by exploiting the symmetries always present when simulating physics. The expressiveness is achieved by allowing a modular procedural programming: Instead of directly focusing on a specific target update function, we develop a library or reusable functions mapping fields to other fields. We consider two kinds of maximal planar graph: with isotropic distribution of PEs or with the hexagonal lattice structure. The first compares to amorphous computing medium and has a better potential for hardware scalability, the second compares with cellular automata computing medium, it is more efficient.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1904.05787
Document Type :
Working Paper