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SIGGRAPH
2000
ACM

Pomegranate: a fully scalable graphics architecture

14 years 4 months ago
Pomegranate: a fully scalable graphics architecture
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 su...
Matthew Eldridge, Homan Igehy, Pat Hanrahan
Added 01 Aug 2010
Updated 01 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2000
Where SIGGRAPH
Authors Matthew Eldridge, Homan Igehy, Pat Hanrahan
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