25,641 research outputs found
Tiramisu: A Polyhedral Compiler for Expressing Fast and Portable Code
This paper introduces Tiramisu, a polyhedral framework designed to generate
high performance code for multiple platforms including multicores, GPUs, and
distributed machines. Tiramisu introduces a scheduling language with novel
extensions to explicitly manage the complexities that arise when targeting
these systems. The framework is designed for the areas of image processing,
stencils, linear algebra and deep learning. Tiramisu has two main features: it
relies on a flexible representation based on the polyhedral model and it has a
rich scheduling language allowing fine-grained control of optimizations.
Tiramisu uses a four-level intermediate representation that allows full
separation between the algorithms, loop transformations, data layouts, and
communication. This separation simplifies targeting multiple hardware
architectures with the same algorithm. We evaluate Tiramisu by writing a set of
image processing, deep learning, and linear algebra benchmarks and compare them
with state-of-the-art compilers and hand-tuned libraries. We show that Tiramisu
matches or outperforms existing compilers and libraries on different hardware
architectures, including multicore CPUs, GPUs, and distributed machines.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1803.0041
Federated Neural Architecture Search
To preserve user privacy while enabling mobile intelligence, techniques have
been proposed to train deep neural networks on decentralized data. However,
training over decentralized data makes the design of neural architecture quite
difficult as it already was. Such difficulty is further amplified when
designing and deploying different neural architectures for heterogeneous mobile
platforms. In this work, we propose an automatic neural architecture search
into the decentralized training, as a new DNN training paradigm called
Federated Neural Architecture Search, namely federated NAS. To deal with the
primary challenge of limited on-client computational and communication
resources, we present FedNAS, a highly optimized framework for efficient
federated NAS. FedNAS fully exploits the key opportunity of insufficient model
candidate re-training during the architecture search process, and incorporates
three key optimizations: parallel candidates training on partial clients, early
dropping candidates with inferior performance, and dynamic round numbers.
Tested on large-scale datasets and typical CNN architectures, FedNAS achieves
comparable model accuracy as state-of-the-art NAS algorithm that trains models
with centralized data, and also reduces the client cost by up to two orders of
magnitude compared to a straightforward design of federated NAS
The CIAO multiparadigm compiler and system: A progress report
Abstract is not available
Using shared-data localization to reduce the cost of inspector-execution in unified-parallel-C programs
Programs written in the Unified Parallel C (UPC) language can access any location of the entire local and remote address space via read/write operations. However, UPC programs that contain fine-grained shared accesses can exhibit performance degradation. One solution is to use the inspector-executor technique to coalesce fine-grained shared accesses to larger remote access operations. A straightforward implementation of the inspector executor transformation results in excessive instrumentation that hinders performance.; This paper addresses this issue and introduces various techniques that aim at reducing the generated instrumentation code: a shared-data localization transformation based on Constant-Stride Linear Memory Descriptors (CSLMADs) [S. Aarseth, Gravitational N-Body Simulations: Tools and Algorithms, Cambridge Monographs on Mathematical Physics, Cambridge University Press, 2003.], the inlining of data locality checks and the usage of an index vector to aggregate the data. Finally, the paper introduces a lightweight loop code motion transformation to privatize shared scalars that were propagated through the loop body.; A performance evaluation, using up to 2048 cores of a POWER 775, explores the impact of each optimization and characterizes the overheads of UPC programs. It also shows that the presented optimizations increase performance of UPC programs up to 1.8 x their UPC hand-optimized counterpart for applications with regular accesses and up to 6.3 x for applications with irregular accesses.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Gunrock: GPU Graph Analytics
For large-scale graph analytics on the GPU, the irregularity of data access
and control flow, and the complexity of programming GPUs, have presented two
significant challenges to developing a programmable high-performance graph
library. "Gunrock", our graph-processing system designed specifically for the
GPU, uses a high-level, bulk-synchronous, data-centric abstraction focused on
operations on a vertex or edge frontier. Gunrock achieves a balance between
performance and expressiveness by coupling high performance GPU computing
primitives and optimization strategies with a high-level programming model that
allows programmers to quickly develop new graph primitives with small code size
and minimal GPU programming knowledge. We characterize the performance of
various optimization strategies and evaluate Gunrock's overall performance on
different GPU architectures on a wide range of graph primitives that span from
traversal-based algorithms and ranking algorithms, to triangle counting and
bipartite-graph-based algorithms. The results show that on a single GPU,
Gunrock has on average at least an order of magnitude speedup over Boost and
PowerGraph, comparable performance to the fastest GPU hardwired primitives and
CPU shared-memory graph libraries such as Ligra and Galois, and better
performance than any other GPU high-level graph library.Comment: 52 pages, invited paper to ACM Transactions on Parallel Computing
(TOPC), an extended version of PPoPP'16 paper "Gunrock: A High-Performance
Graph Processing Library on the GPU
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