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Allen D. Malony Department of Computer and Information Science Performance Research Laboratory University of Oregon Performance Technology.

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Presentation on theme: "Allen D. Malony Department of Computer and Information Science Performance Research Laboratory University of Oregon Performance Technology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Allen D. Malony malony@cs.uoregon.edu Department of Computer and Information Science Performance Research Laboratory University of Oregon Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel Computing

2 LACSI 20042 Outline of Talk  Research motivation  Scalability, productivity, and performance technology  Application-specific and autonomic performance tools  TAU parallel performance system developments  Application performance case studies  New project directions  Discussion

3 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20043 Research Motivation  Tools for performance problem solving  Empirical-based performance optimization process  Performance technology concerns characterization Performance Tuning Performance Diagnosis Performance Experimentation Performance Observation hypotheses properties Instrumentation Measurement Analysis Visualization Performance Technology Experiment management Performance database Performance Technology

4 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20044 Problem Description  How does our view of this process change when we consider very large-scale parallel systems?  What are the significant issues that will affect the technology used to support the process?  Parallel performance observation is clearly needed  In general, there is the concern for intrusion  Seen as a tradeoff with performance diagnosis accuracy  Scaling complicates observation and analysis  Nature of application development may change  Paradigm shift in performance process and technology?  What will enhance productive application development?

5 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20045 Scaling and Performance Observation  Consider “traditional” measurement methods  Profiling: summary statistics calculated during execution  Tracing: time-stamped sequence of execution events  More parallelism  more performance data overall  Performance specific to each thread of execution  Possible increase in number interactions between threads  Harder to manage the data (memory, transfer, storage)  How does per thread profile size grow?  Instrumentation more difficult with greater parallelism?  More parallelism / performance data  harder analysis  More time consuming to analyze and difficult to visualize

6 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20046 Concern for Performance Measurement Intrusion  Performance measurement can affect the execution  Perturbation of “actual” performance behavior  Minor intrusion can lead to major execution effects  Problems exist even with small degree of parallelism  Intrusion is accepted consequence of standard practice  Consider intrusion (perturbation) of trace buffer overflow  Scale exacerbates the problem … or does it?  Traditional measurement techniques tend to be localized  Suggests scale may not compound local intrusion globally  Measuring parallel interactions likely will be affected  Use accepted measurement techniques intelligently

7 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20047 Role of Intelligence and Specificity  How to make the process more effective (productive)?  Scale forces performance observation to be intelligent  Standard approaches deliver a lot of data with little value  What are the important performance events and data?  Tied to application structure and computational mode  Tools have poor support for application-specific aspects  Process and tools can be more application-aware  Will allow scalability issues to be addressed in context  More control and precision of performance observation  More guided performance experimentation / exploration  Better integration with application development

8 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20048 Role of Automation and Knowledge Discovery  Even with intelligent and application-specific tools, the decisions of what to analyze may become intractable  Scale forces the process to become more automated  Performance extrapolation must be part of the process  Build autonomic capabilities into the tools  Support broader experimentation methods and refinement  Access and correlate data from several sources  Automate performance data analysis / mining / learning  Include predictive features and experiment refinement  Knowledge-driven adaptation and optimization guidance  Address scale issues through increased expertise

9 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 20049 TAU Parallel Performance System Goals  Multi-level performance instrumentation  Multi-language automatic source instrumentation  Flexible and configurable performance measurement  Widely-ported parallel performance profiling system  Computer system architectures and operating systems  Different programming languages and compilers  Support for multiple parallel programming paradigms  Multi-threading, message passing, mixed-mode, hybrid  Support for performance mapping  Support for object-oriented and generic programming  Integration in complex software, systems, applications

10 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200410 TAU Performance System Architecture

11 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200411 TAU Performance System Architecture

12 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200412 TAU Instrumentation Advances  Source instrumentation  Program Database Toolkit (PDT)  automated Fortran 90/95 support (Flint parser, very robust)  statement level support in C/C++ (Fortran soon)  TAU_COMPILER to automate instrumentation process  Automatic proxy generation for component applications  automatic CCA component instrumentation  Python instrumentation and automatic instrumentation  Continued integration with dynamic instrumentation  Update of OpenMP instrumentation (POMP2)  Selective instrumentation and overhead reduction  Improvements in performance mapping instrumentation

13 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200413 TAU Measurement Advances  Profiling  Memory profiling  global heap memory tracking (several options)  Callpath profiling  user-controllable calling depth  Improved support for multiple counter profiling  Online profile access and sampling  Tracing  Generation of VTF3 traces files (portable)  Inclusion of hardware performance counts in trace files  Hierarchical trace merging  Online performance overhead compensation  Component software proxy generation and monitoring

14 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200414 TAU Performance Analysis Advances  Enhanced parallel profile analysis (ParaProf)  Performance Data Management Framework (PerfDMF)  First release of prototype  Callpath analysis integration in ParaProf  Integration with Vampir Next Generation (VNG)  Online trace analysis  Performance visualization (ParaVis) prototype  Component performance modeling and QoS

15 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200415 Component-Based Scientific Applications  How to support performance analysis and tuning process consistent with application development methodology?  Common Component Architecture (CCA) applications  Performance tools should integrate with software  Design performance observation component  Measurement port and measurement interfaces  Build support for application component instrumentation  Interpose a proxy component for each port  Inside the proxy, track caller/callee invocations, timings  Automate the process of proxy component creation  using PDT for static analysis of components  include support for selective instrumentation

16 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200416 Flame Reaction-Diffusion (Sandia, J. Ray) CCAFFEINE

17 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200417 Component Modeling and Optimization  Given a set of components, where each component has multiple implementations, what is the optimal subset of implementations that solve a given problem?  How to model a single component?  How to model a composition of components?  How to select optimal subset of implementations?  A component only has performance meaning in context  Applications are dynamically composed at runtime  Application developers use components from others  Instrumentation may only be at component interfaces  Performance measurements need to be non-intrusive  Users interested in a coarse-grained performance

18 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200418 MasterMind Component (Trebon, IPDPS 2004)

19 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200419 Proxy Generator for other Applications  PDT-based proxy component for:  QoS tracking [Boyana, ANL]  Debugging Port Monitor for CCA (tracks arguments)  SCIRun2 Perfume components [Venkat, U. Utah]  Exploring Babel for auto-generation of proxies:  Direct SIDL to proxy code generation  Generating client component interface in C++  Using PDT for generating proxies

20 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200420 Earth Systems Modeling Framework  Coupled modeling with modular software framework  Instrumentation for framework and applications  PDT automatic instrumentation  Fortran 95  C / C++  MPI wrapper library for MPI calls  Component instrumentation (using CCA Components)  CCA measurement port manual instrumentation  Proxy generation using PDT and runtime interposition  Significant callpath profiling use by ESMF team

21 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200421 Using TAU Component in ESMF/CCA

22 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200422 TAU’s Paraprof Profile Browser (ESMF Data) Callpath profile

23 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200423 TAU Traces with Counters (ESMF)

24 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200424 Visualizing TAU Traces with Counters/Samples

25 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200425 Uintah Computational Framework (UCF)  University of Utah, Center for Simulation of Accidental Fires and Explosions (C-SAFE), DOE ASCI Center  UCF analysis  Scheduling  MPI library  Components  Performance mapping  Use for online and offline visualization  ParaVis tools F 500 processees

26 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200426 Scatterplot Displays  Each point coordinate determined by three values: MPI_Reduce MPI_Recv MPI_Waitsome  Min/Max value range  Effective for cluster analysis Relation between MPI_Recv and MPI_Waitsome

27 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200427 Online Unitah Performance Profiling  Demonstration of online profiling capability  Colliding elastic disks  Test material point method (MPM) code  Executed on 512 processors ASCI Blue Pacific at LLNL  Example  Bargraph visualization  MPI execution time  Performance mapping  Multiple time steps

28 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200428 Miranda Performance Analysis (Miller, LLNL)  Miranda is a research hydrodynamics code  Fortran 95, MPI  Mostly synchronous  MPI_ALLTOALL on  Np x,y communicators  Some MPI reductions and broadcasts for statistics  Good communications scaling  ACL and MCR  Sibling Linux clusters  ~1000 Intel P4 nodes, dual 2.4 GHz  Up to 1728 CPUs  Fixed workload per CPU  Ported to BlueGene/L

29 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200429 Tau Profiling of Miranda on BG/L 128 Nodes512 Nodes1024 Nodes  Miranda team is using TAU to profile code performance  Routinely runs on BG/L for 1000 CPUs for 10-20 minutes  Scaling studies (problem size, number of processors)

30 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200430 Fine Grained Profiling via Tracing  Miranda uses TAU to generate traces  Combines MPI calls with HW counter information  Detailed code behavior to focus optimization efforts

31 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200431 Max Heap Memory (KB) used for 128 3 problem on 16 processors of ASC Frost at LLNL Memory Usage Analysis  BG/L will have limited memory per node (512 MB)  Miranda uses TAU to profile memory usage  Streamlines code  Squeeze larger problems on the machine

32 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200432 Kull Performance Optimization (Miller, LLNL)  Kull is a Lagrange hydrodynamics code  Physics packages written in C++ and Fortran  Parallel Python interpreter run-time environment!  Scalar test problem analysis  Serial execution to identify performance factors  Original code profile indicated expensive functions  CCSubzonalEffects member functions  Examination revealed optimization opportunities  Loop merging  Amortizing geometric lookup over more calculations  Apply to CSSubzonalEffects member functions

33 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200433 Kull Optimization Optimized Exclusive Profile Original Exclusive Profile  CSSubzonalEffects member functions total time  Reduced from 5.80 seconds to 0.82 seconds  Overall run time reduce from 28.1 to 22.85 seconds

34 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200434 Important Questions for Application Developers  How does performance vary with different compilers?  Is poor performance correlated with certain OS features?  Has a recent change caused unanticipated performance?  How does performance vary with MPI variants?  Why is one application version faster than another?  What is the reason for the observed scaling behavior?  Did two runs exhibit similar performance?  How are performance data related to application events?  Which machines will run my code the fastest and why?  Which benchmarks predict my code performance best?

35 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200435 Multi-Level Performance Data Mining  New (just forming) research project  PSU: Karen L. Karavanic  Cornell: Sally A. McKee  UO: Allen D. Malony and Sameer Shende  LLNL: John M. May and Bronis R. de Supinski  Develop performance data mining technology  Scientific applications, benchmarks, other measurements  Systematic analysis for understanding and prediction  Better foundation for evaluation of leadership-class computer systems

36 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200436 Goals  Answer questions at multiple levels of interest  Data from low-level measurments and simulations  use to predict application performance  data mining applied to optimize data gathering process  High-level performance data spanning dimensions  Machine, applications, code revisions  Examine broad performance trends  Need technology  Performance data instrumentation and measurement  Performance data management  Performance analysis and results presentation  Automated performance exploration

37 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200437 Specific Goals  Design, develop, and populate a performance database  Discover general correlations application performance and features of their external environment  Develop methods to predict application performance on lower-level metrics  Discover performance correlations between a small set of benchmarks and a collection of applications that represent a typical workload for a give system  Performance data mining infrastructure is important for all of these goals  Establish a more rational basis for evaluating the performance of leadership-class computers

38 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200438 PerfTrack: Performance DB and Analysis Tool PSU: Kathryn Mohror, Karen Karavanic UO: Kevin Huck, Allen D. Malony LLNL: John May, Brian Miller (CASC)

39 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200439 TAU Performance Data Management Framework

40 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200440 TAU Performance Regression (PerfRegress)

41 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200441 Background – Ahn & Vetter, 2002  “Scalable Analysis Techniques for Microprocessor Performance Counter Metrics,” SC2002  Applied multivariate statistical analysis techniques to large datasets of performance data (PAPI events)  Cluster Analysis and F-Ratio  Agglomerative Hierarchical Method - dendogram identified groupings of master, slave threads in sPPM  K-means clustering and F-ratio - differences between master, slave related to communication and management  Factor Analysis  shows highly correlated metrics fall into peer groups  Combined techniques (recursively) leads to observations of application behavior hard to identify otherwise

42 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200442 Thread Similarity Matrix  Apply techniques from the phase analysis (Sherwood)  Threads of execution can be visually compared  Threads with abnormal behavior show up as less similar than other threads  Each thread is represented as a vector (V) of dimension n  n is the number of functions in the application V = [f 1, f 2, …, f n ] (represent event mix)  Each value is the percentage of time spent in that function  normalized from 0.0 to 1.0  Distance calculated between the vectors U and V: ManhattanDistance(U, V) = ∑ |u i - v i | i=0 n

43 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200443 sPPM on Blue Horizon (64x4, OpenMP+MPI) TAU profiles 10 events PerfDMF threads 32-47

44 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200444 sPPM on MCR (total instructions, 16x2) TAU/PerfDMF 120 events master (even) worker (odd)

45 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200445 sPPM on MCR (PAPI_FP_INS, 16x2) TAU profiles PerfDMF master/worker higher/lower

46 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200446 sPPM on Frost (PAPI_FP_INS, 256 threads)  View of fewer than half of the threads of execution is possible on the screen at one time  Three groups are obvious:  Lower ranking threads  One unique thread  Higher ranking threads  3% more FP  Finding subtle differences is difficult with this view

47 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200447  Dendrogram shows 5 natural clusters:  Unique thread  High ranking master threads  Low ranking master threads  High ranking worker threads  Low ranking worker threads sPPM on Frost (PAPI_FP_INS, 256 threads) TAU profiles PerfDMF R access threads

48 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200448 sPPM on MCR (PAPI_FP_INS, 16x2 threads) masters slaves

49 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200449 sPPM on Frost (PAPI_FP_INS, 256 threads)  After k-means clustering into 5 clusters  Similar natural clusters are grouped  Each groups performance characteristics analyzed  256 threads of data has been reduced to 5 clusters! SPPMINTERFDIFUZEDINTERFBarrier [OpenMP:runhyd3.F ] 1612011910

50 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200450 Extreme Performance Scalable Oss (ZeptoOS)  DOE, Office of Science  OS / RTS for Extreme Scale Scientific Computation  Argonne National Lab and University of Oregon  Investigate operating system and run-time (OS/R) functionality required for scalable components used in petascale architectures  Flexible OS/R functionality  Scalable OS/R system calls  Performance tools, monitoring, and metrics  Fault tolerance and resiliency  Approach  Specify OS/R requirements across scalable components  Explore flexible functionality (Linux)  Hierarchical designs optimized with collective OS/R interfaces  Integrated (horizontal, vertical) performance measurement / analysis  Fault scenarios and injection to observe behavior

51 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200451 ZeptoOS Plans  Explore Linux functionality for BG/L  Explore efficiency for ultra-small kernels  Scheduler, memory, IO  Construct kernel-level collective operations  Support for dynamic library loading, …  Build Faulty Towers Linux kernel and system for replaying fault scenarios  Extend TAU  Profiling OS suites  Benchmarking collective OS calls  Observing effects of faults

52 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200452 Discussion  As high-end systems scale, it will be increasingly important that performance tools be used effectively  Performance observation methods do not necessarily need to change in a fundamental sense  Just need to be controlled and used efficiently  More intelligent performance systems for productive use  Evolve to application-specific performance technology  Deal with scale by “full range” performance exploration  Autonomic and integrated tools  Knowledge-based and knowledge-driven process  Deliver to community next-generation

53 Performance Technology for Productive, High-End Parallel ComputingLACSI 200453 Support Acknowledgements  Department of Energy (DOE)  Office of Science contracts  University of Utah ASCI Level 1 sub-contract  ASC/NNSA Level 3 contract  NSF  High-End Computing Grant  Research Centre Juelich  John von Neumann Institute  Dr. Bernd Mohr  Los Alamos National Laboratory


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