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Sameer Shende, Allen D. Malony {sameer, Department of Computer and Information Science Computational Science Institute University.

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Presentation on theme: "Sameer Shende, Allen D. Malony {sameer, Department of Computer and Information Science Computational Science Institute University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sameer Shende, Allen D. Malony {sameer, malony}@cs.uoregon.edu Department of Computer and Information Science Computational Science Institute University of Oregon Recent Advances in the TAU Performance System

2 University of Utah 2 Oct. 29, 2002 Outline  Introduction to TAU and PDT  New features  Instrumentation  CCA  Integration of Uintah and TAU  Performance Monitoring Framework  Performance Tracking and Reporting: XPARE  Performance Database Framework  Work in Progress  Conclusions

3 University of Utah 3 Oct. 29, 2002 TAU Performance System Framework  Tuning and Analysis Utilities  Performance system framework for scalable parallel and distributed high- performance computing  Targets a general complex system computation model  nodes / contexts / threads  Multi-level: system / software / parallelism  Measurement and analysis abstraction  Integrated toolkit for performance instrumentation, measurement, analysis, and visualization  Portable, configurable performance profiling/tracing facility  Open software approach  University of Oregon, LANL, FZJ Germany  http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/research/paracomp/tau http://www.cs.uoregon.edu/research/paracomp/tau

4 University of Utah 4 Oct. 29, 2002 TAU Performance System Architecture EPILOG Paraver

5 University of Utah 5 Oct. 29, 2002 Program Database Toolkit (PDT)  Program code analysis framework for developing source- based tools  High-level interface to source code information  Integrated toolkit for source code parsing, database creation, and database query  commercial grade front end parsers  portable IL analyzer, database format, and access API  open software approach for tool development  Target and integrate multiple source languages  Use in TAU to build automated performance instrumentation tools

6 University of Utah 6 Oct. 29, 2002 PDT Architecture and Tools C/C++ Fortran 77/90

7 University of Utah 7 Oct. 29, 2002 New Features in TAU  Instrumentation  OPARI – OpenMP directive rewriting approach [POMP, FZJ]  Selective instrumentation –grouping, include/exclude lists  tau_reduce – rule based detection of high overhead lightweight routines  CCA: TAU component interface  Measurement  PAPI [UTK] – Support for multiple hardware counters/time  Callpath profiling (1-level)  Native generation of EPILOG traces [EXPERT, FZJ]  Analysis  Support for Paraver [CEPBA] trace visualizer  jracy – New Java based profile browser in TAU  Availability  Support for new platforms and compilers (NEC, Hitachi, Intel…)

8 University of Utah 8 Oct. 29, 2002 Instrumentation Control  Selection of which performance events to observe  Could depend on scope, type, level of interest  Could depend on instrumentation overhead  How is selection supported in instrumentation system?  No choice  Include / exclude lists (TAU)  Environment variables  Static vs. dynamic  Problem: Controlling instrumentation of small routines  High relative measurement overhead  Significant intrusion and possible perturbation

9 University of Utah 9 Oct. 29, 2002 Instrumentation Control: Grouping  Profile Groups  A group of related routines forms a profile group  Statically defined  TAU_DEFAULT, TAU_USER[1-5], TAU_MESSAGE, TAU_IO, …  Dynamically defined  Group name based on string “integrator”, “particles”  Runtime lookup in a map to get unique group identifier  tau_instrumentor file.pdb file.cpp –o file.i.cpp -g “particles” Assigns all routines in file.cpp to group “particles”  Ability to change group names at runtime  Instrumentation control based on profile groups

10 University of Utah 10 Oct. 29, 2002 TAU Instrumentation Control API  Enabling Profile Groups  TAU_ENABLE_INSTRUMENTATION(); // Global control  TAU_ENABLE_GROUP(TAU_GROUP); // statically defined  TAU_ENABLE_GROUP_NAME(“group name”); // dynamic  TAU_ENABLE_ALL_GROUPS(); // for all groups  Disabling Profile Groups  TAU_DISABLE_INSTRUMENTATION();  TAU_DISABLE_GROUP(TAU_GROUP);  TAU_DISABLE_GROUP_NAME();  TAU_DISABLE_ALL_GROUPS();  Obtaining Profile Group Identifier  TAU_GET_PROFILE_GROUP(“group name”);  Runtime Switching of Profile Groups  TAU_PROFILE_SET_GROUP(TAU_GROUP);  TAU_PROFILE_SET_GROUP_NAME(“group name”);

11 University of Utah 11 Oct. 29, 2002 TAU Pre-execution Instrumentation Control  Dynamic groups defined at file scope  Group names and group associations may be modified at runtime  Controlling groups at pre-execution time using --profile option % tau_instrumentor app.pdb app.cpp –o app.i.cpp –g “particles” % mpirun –np 4 application –profile particles+field+mesh+io  Enables instrumentation for TAU_DEFAULT and particles, field, mesh and io groups.  Examples:  POOMA v1 (LANL)  Static groups used  VTF (ASAP Caltech)  Dynamic execution instrumentation control by python based controller

12 University of Utah 12 Oct. 29, 2002 Selective Instrumentation: Include/Exclude Lists % tau_instrumentor Usage : tau_instrumentor [-o ] [-noinline] [-g groupname] [-i headerfile] [-c|-c++|-fortran] [-f ] For selective instrumentation, use –f option % cat selective.dat # Selective instrumentation: Specify an exclude/include list. BEGIN_EXCLUDE_LIST void quicksort(int *, int, int) void sort_5elements(int *) void interchange(int *, int *) END_EXCLUDE_LIST # If an include list is specified, the routines in the list will be the only # routines that are instrumented. # To specify an include list (a list of routines that will be instrumented) # remove the leading # to uncomment the following lines #BEGIN_INCLUDE_LIST #int main(int, char **) #int select_ #END_INCLUDE_LIST

13 University of Utah 13 Oct. 29, 2002 Rule-Based Overhead Analysis (N. Trebon, UO)  Analyze the performance data to determine events with high (relative) overhead performance measurements  Create a select list for excluding those events  Rule grammar (used in tau_reduce tool) [GroupName:] Field Operator Number  GroupName indicates rule applies to events in group  Field is a event metric attribute (from profile statistics)  numcalls, numsubs, percent, usec, cumusec, count [PAPI], totalcount, stdev, usecs/call, counts/call  Operator is one of >, <, or =  Number is any number  Compound rules possible using & between simple rules

14 University of Utah 14 Oct. 29, 2002 Example Rules  #Exclude all events that are members of TAU_USER #and use less than 1000 microseconds TAU_USER:usec < 1000  #Exclude all events that have less than 100 #microseconds and are called only once usec < 1000 & numcalls = 1  #Exclude all events that have less than 1000 usecs per #call OR have a (total inclusive) percent less than 5 usecs/call < 1000 percent < 5  Scientific notation can be used  usec>1000 & numcalls>400000 & usecs/call 25

15 University of Utah 15 Oct. 29, 2002 CCA: Extended Component Design  PKC: Performance Knowledge Component  POC: Performance Observability Component generic component

16 University of Utah 16 Oct. 29, 2002 Design of Performance Observation Component Performance Component  One performance component per context  Performance component provides a Measurement Port  Measurement Port allows a user to create and access:  Timer (start/stop, set name/type/group)  Event (trigger)  Control (enable/disable groups)  Query (get functions, metrics, counters, dump to disk) Timer Event Control Query Measurement Port

17 University of Utah 17 Oct. 29, 2002 Measurement Port in CCAFEINE namespace performance { namespace ccaports { class Measurement: public virtual classic::gov::cca::Port { public: virtual ~ Measurement (){} /* Create a Timer */ virtual performance::Timer* createTimer(void) = 0; virtual performance::Timer* createTimer(string name) = 0; virtual performance::Timer* createTimer(string name, string type) = 0; virtual performance::Timer* createTimer(string name, string type, string group) = 0; /* Create a Query interface */ virtual performance::Query* createQuery(void) = 0; /* Create a User Defined Event interface */ virtual performance::Event* createEvent(void) = 0; virtual performance::Event* createEvent(string name) = 0; /** * Create a Control interface for selectively enabling and disabling * the instrumentation based on groups */ virtual performance::Control* createControl(void) = 0; }; }

18 University of Utah 18 Oct. 29, 2002 Timer Class Interface namespace performance { class Timer { public: virtual ~Timer() {} /* Start the Timer. Implement these methods in * a derived class to provide required functionality. */ virtual void start(void) = 0; /* Stop the Timer.*/ virtual void stop(void) = 0; virtual void setName(string name) = 0; virtual string getName(void) = 0; virtual void setType(string name) = 0; virtual string getType(void) = 0; /**Set the group name associated with the Timer * (e.g., All MPI calls can be grouped into an "MPI" group)*/ virtual void setGroupName(string name) = 0; virtual string getGroupName(void) = 0; virtual void setGroupId(unsigned long group ) = 0; virtual unsigned long getGroupId(void) = 0; }; }

19 University of Utah 19 Oct. 29, 2002 Control Class Interface namespace performance { class Control { public: ~Control () { } /* Control instrumentation. Enable group Id.*/ virtual void enableGroupId(unsigned long id) = 0; /* Control instrumentation. Disable group Id. */ virtual void disableGroupId(unsigned long id) = 0; /* Control instrumentation. Enable group name. */ virtual void enableGroupName(string name) = 0; /* Control instrumentation. Disable group name.*/ virtual void disableGroupName(string name) = 0; /* Control instrumentation. Enable all groups.*/ virtual void enableAllGroups(void) = 0; /* Control instrumentation. Disable all groups.*/ virtual void disableAllGroups(void) = 0; }; }

20 University of Utah 20 Oct. 29, 2002 Query Class Interface namespace performance { class Query { public: virtual ~Query() {} /* Get the list of Timer names */ virtual void getTimerNames(const char **& functionList, int& numFuncs) = 0; /* Get the list of Counter names */ virtual void getCounterNames(const char **& counterList, int& numCounters) = 0; /* getTimerData. Returns lists of metrics.*/ virtual void getTimerData(const char **& inTimerList, int numTimers, double **& counterExclusive, double **& counterInclusive, int*& numCalls, int*& numChildCalls, const char **& counterNames, int& numCounters) = 0; virtual void dumpProfileData(void) = 0; virtual void dumpProfileDataIncremental(void) = 0; // timestamped dump virtual void dumpTimerNames(void) = 0; virtual void dumpTimerData(const char **& inTimerList, int numTimers) = 0; virtual void dumpTimerDataIncremental(const char **& inTimerList, int numTimers) = 0; }; }

21 University of Utah 21 Oct. 29, 2002 Measurement Port Implementation  TAU component implements the MeasurementPort  Implements Timer, Control, Query and Control classes  Registers the port with the CCAFEINE framework  Components target the generic MeasurementPort interface  Runtime selection of TAU component during execution  Instrumentation code independent of underlying tool  Instrumentation code independent of measurement choice  TauMeasurement_CCA port implementation uses a specific TAU measurement library

22 University of Utah 22 Oct. 29, 2002 Using MeasurementPort #include "ports/Measurement_CCA.h" … double MonteCarloIntegrator::integrate (double lowBound, double upBound, int count) { classic::gov::cca::Port * port; double sum = 0.0; // Get Measurement port port = frameworkServices->getPort ("MeasurementPort"); if (port) measurement_m = dynamic_cast (port); if (measurement_m == 0){ cerr createTimer( string("IntegrateTimer")); t->start(); for (int i = 0; i getRandomNumber (); sum = sum + function_m->evaluate (x); } t->stop();

23 University of Utah 23 Oct. 29, 2002 Using TAU Component in CCAFEINE repository get TauMeasurement repository get Driver repository get MidpointIntegrator repository get MonteCarloIntegrator repository get RandomGenerator repository get LinearFunction repository get NonlinearFunction repository get PiFunction create LinearFunction lin_func create NonlinearFunction nonlin_func create PiFunction pi_func create MonteCarloIntegrator mc_integrator create RandomGenerator rand create TauMeasurement tau connect mc_integrator RandomGeneratorPort rand RandomGeneratorPort connect mc_integrator FunctionPort nonlin_func FunctionPort connect mc_integrator MeasurementPort tau MeasurementPort create Driver driver connect driver IntegratorPort mc_integrator IntegratorPort go driver Go quit

24 University of Utah 24 Oct. 29, 2002 Uintah Problem Solving Environment (U.Utah)  Enhanced SCIRun PSE  Pure dataflow  component-based  Shared memory  scalable multi-/mixed-mode parallelism  Interactive only  interactive plus standalone  Design and implement Uintah component architecture  Application programmers provide  description of computation (tasks and variables)  code to perform task on single “patch” (sub-region of space)  Components for scheduling, partitioning, load balance, …  Follows Common Component Architecture (CCA) model  Design and implement Uintah Computational Framework (UCF) on top of the component architecture

25 University of Utah 25 Oct. 29, 2002 Performance Analysis Objectives for Uintah  Micro tuning  Optimization of simulation code (task) kernels for maximum serial performance  Scalability tuning  Identification of parallel execution bottlenecks  overheads: scheduler, data warehouse, communication  load imbalance  Adjustment of task graph decomposition and scheduling  Performance tracking  Understand performance impacts of code modifications  Throughout course of software development  C-SAFE application and UCF software

26 University of Utah 26 Oct. 29, 2002 Uintah Task Graph (Material Point Method)  Diagram of named tasks (ovals) and data (edges)  Imminent computation  Dataflow-constrained  MPM  Newtonian material point motion time step  Solid: values defined at material point (particle)  Dashed: values defined at vertex (grid)  Prime (’): values updated during time step

27 University of Utah 27 Oct. 29, 2002 Task execution time dominates (what task?) MPI communication overheads (where?) Task Execution in Uintah Parallel Scheduler  Profile methods and functions in scheduler and in MPI library Task execution time distribution per process  Need to map performance data!

28 University of Utah 28 Oct. 29, 2002 Performance Data Mapping using TAU  Two level mappings:  Level 1:  Level 2:  Embedded association vs External association Data (object) Performance Data... Hash Table

29 University of Utah 29 Oct. 29, 2002 Task Performance Mapping Instrumentation void MPIScheduler::execute(const ProcessorGroup * pc, DataWarehouseP & old_dw, DataWarehouseP & dw ) {... TAU_MAPPING_CREATE( task->getName(), "[MPIScheduler::execute()]", (TauGroup_t)(void*)task->getName(), task->getName(), 0);... TAU_MAPPING_OBJECT(tautimer) TAU_MAPPING_LINK(tautimer,(TauGroup_t)(void*)task->getName()); // EXTERNAL ASSOCIATION... TAU_MAPPING_PROFILE_TIMER(doitprofiler, tautimer, 0) TAU_MAPPING_PROFILE_START(doitprofiler,0); task->doit(pc); TAU_MAPPING_PROFILE_STOP(0);... }

30 University of Utah 30 Oct. 29, 2002 Task Performance Mapping (Profile) Performance mapping for different tasks Mapped task performance across processes

31 University of Utah 31 Oct. 29, 2002 Performance Mapping using Tasks and Patches

32 University of Utah 32 Oct. 29, 2002 Task Performance Mapping (Trace) Work packet computation events colored by task type Distinct phases of computation can be identifed based on task

33 University of Utah 33 Oct. 29, 2002 Task Performance Mapping (Trace - Zoom) Startup communication imbalance

34 University of Utah 34 Oct. 29, 2002 Task Performance Mapping (Trace - Parallelism) Communication / load imbalance

35 University of Utah 35 Oct. 29, 2002 Comparing Uintah Traces for Scalability Analysis 8 processes 32 processes

36 University of Utah 36 Oct. 29, 2002 Performance Monitoring Framework (K. Li) Application Performance Steering Performance Visualizer Performance Analyzer Performance Data Reader TAU Performance System Performance Data Integrator SCIRun || performance data streams || performance data output file system sample sequencing reader synchronization

37 University of Utah 37 Oct. 29, 2002 2D Field Performance Visualization in SCIRun SCIRun program

38 University of Utah 38 Oct. 29, 2002 3D Field Performance Visualization in SCIRun SCIRun program

39 University of Utah 39 Oct. 29, 2002 Uintah Computational Framework (UCF)  University of Utah  UCF analysis  Scheduling  MPI library  components  500 processes  Use for online and offline visualization  Incorporate steering

40 University of Utah 40 Oct. 29, 2002 Performance Tracking and Reporting  Integrated performance measurement allows performance analysis throughout development lifetime  Applied performance engineering in software design and development (software engineering) process  Create “performance portfolio” from regular performance experimentation (couple with software testing)  Use performance knowledge in making key software design decision, prior to major development stages  Use performance benchmarking and regression testing to identify irregularities  Support automatic reporting of “performance bugs”  Enable cross-platform (cross-generation) evaluation

41 University of Utah 41 Oct. 29, 2002 XPARE - eXPeriment Alerting and REporting  Experiment launcher automates measurement / analysis  Configuration and compilation of performance tools  Instrumentation control for Uintah experiment type  Execution of multiple performance experiments  Performance data collection, analysis, and storage  Integrated in Uintah software testing harness  Reporting system conducts performance regression tests  Apply performance difference thresholds (alert ruleset)  Alerts users via email if thresholds have been exceeded  Web alerting setup and full performance data reporting  Historical performance data analysis

42 University of Utah 42 Oct. 29, 2002 XPARE System Architecture (A. Morris, Dav) Experiment Launch Mail server Performance Database Performance Reporter Comparison Tool Regression Analyzer Alerting Setup Web server

43 University of Utah 43 Oct. 29, 2002 Experiment Results Viewing Selection

44 University of Utah 44 Oct. 29, 2002 Web-Based Experiment Reporting

45 University of Utah 45 Oct. 29, 2002 Web-Based Experiment Reporting (continued)

46 University of Utah 46 Oct. 29, 2002 Alerting Setup

47 University of Utah 47 Oct. 29, 2002 TAU Performance Database Framework (Li Li) Performance analysis programs Performance analysis and query toolkit  profile data only  XML representation  project / experiment / trial PerfDML translators... ORDB PostgreSQL PerfDB Performance data description Raw performance data

48 Argonne CCA Meeting 48 June 24, 2002 TAU Status  Instrumentation supported:  Source, preprocessor, compiler, MPI, runtime, virtual machine  Languages supported:  C++, C, F90, Java, Python  HPF, ZPL, HPC++, pC++...  Packages supported:  PAPI [UTK], PCL [FZJ] (hardware performance counter access),  Opari, PDT [UO,LANL,FZJ], DyninstAPI [U.Maryland] (instrumentation),  EXPERT, EPILOG[FZJ],Vampir[Pallas], Paraver [CEPBA] (visualization)  Platforms supported:  IBM SP, SGI Origin, Sun, HP Superdome, HP/Compaq Tru64 ES,  Linux clusters (IA-32, IA-64, PowerPC, Alpha), Apple, Windows,  Hitachi SR8000, NEC SX, Cray T3E...  Compilers suites supported:  GNU, Intel KAI (KCC, KAP/Pro), Intel, SGI, IBM, Compaq,HP, Fujitsu, Hitachi, Sun, Apple, Microsoft, NEC, Cray, PGI, Absoft, …  Thread libraries supported:  Pthreads, SGI sproc, OpenMP, Windows, Java, SMARTS

49 Argonne CCA Meeting 49 June 24, 2002 Work in Progress  Instrumentation of individual tasks  SCIRun based online performance data monitoring  Integration of XPARE with performance database framework  Support for complex SQL queries  Instrumentation of mixed mode (MPI+threads) Uintah executions  Instrumentation of Uintah CCA components using TAU CCA interface

50 Argonne CCA Meeting 50 June 24, 2002 Concluding Remarks  Modern scientific simulation environments involves a complex (scientific) software engineering process  Iterative, diverse expertise, multiple teams, concurrent  Complex parallel software and systems pose challenging performance analysis problems that require flexible and robust performance technology and methods  Cross-platform, cross-language, large-scale  Fully-integrated performance analysis system  Performance mapping  Need to support performance engineering methodology within scientific software design and development  Performance comparison and tracking

51 Argonne CCA Meeting 51 June 24, 2002 Acknowledgements  Department of Energy (DOE), ASCI Academic Strategic Alliances Program (ASAP)  Center for the Simulation of Accidental Fires and Explosions (C-SAFE), ASCI/ASAP Level 1 center, University of Utah http://www.csafe.utah.edu http://www.csafe.utah.edu  Computational Science Institute, ASCI/ASAP Level 3 projects with LLNL / LANL, University of Oregon http://www.csi.uoregon.edu http://www.csi.uoregon.edu  ftp://ftp.cs.uoregon.edu/pub/malony/Talks/ishpc2002.ppt


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