This paper examines the cost/performance of simulating a hypothetical target parallel computer using a commercial host parallel computer. We address the question of whether parallel simulation is simply faster than sequential simulation, and whether it is also more cost-effective. To answer this, we develop a performance model of the Wisconsin Wind Tunnel (WWT), a system that simulates cache-coherent shared-memory machines on a message- passing Thinking Machines CM-5. The performance model uses Kruskal and Weiss's fork-join model to account for the effect of event processing time variability on WWT's conservative fixed-window simulation algorithm
James Gonzalo King, Pramod Shivaji Kumbhar, Iain Hepburn, Weiliang Chen, Tristan Mathieu Carel, Alessandro Cattabiani, Nicola Cantarutti, Omar Awile, Christos Kotsalos, Samuel Marie A Melchior, Baudouin Paul Michel Maria Joseph Del Marmol, Giacomo Castiglioni
Michel Bierlaire, Marija Kukic