80 research outputs found

    Replication for send-deterministic MPI HPC applications

    Get PDF
    International audienceReplication has recently gained attention in the context of fault tolerance for large scale MPI HPC applications. Existing implementations try to cover all MPI codes and to be independent from the underlying library. In this paper, we evaluate the advantages of adopting a different approach. First, we try to take advantage of a communication property common to many MPI HPC application, namely send-determinism. Second, we choose to implement replication inside the MPI library. The main advantage of our approach is simplicity. While being only a small patch to the Open MPI library, our solution called SDR-MPI supports most main features of the MPI standard including all collectives and group operations. SDR-MPI additionally achieves good performance: Experiments run with HPC benchmarks and applications show that its overhead remains below 5%

    Unified fault-tolerance framework for hybrid task-parallel message-passing applications

    Get PDF
    We present a unified fault-tolerance framework for task-parallel message-passing applications to mitigate transient errors. First, we propose a fault-tolerant message-logging protocol that only requires the restart of the task that experienced the error and transparently handles any message passing interface calls inside the task. In our experiments we demonstrate that our fault-tolerant solution has a reasonable overhead, with a maximum observed overhead of 4.5%. We also show that fine-grained parallelization is important for hiding the overheads related to the protocol as well as the recovery of tasks. Secondly, we develop a mathematical model to unify task-level checkpointing and our protocol with system-wide checkpointing in order to provide complete failure coverage. We provide closed formulas for the optimal checkpointing interval and the performance score of the unified scheme. Experimental results show that the performance improvement can be as high as 98% with the unified scheme.The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the FI-DGR 2013 scholarship and the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013] under the Mont-blanc 2 Project (www.montblanc-project.eu), grant agreement no. 610402 and TIN2015-65316-P.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Fault tolerance at system level based on RADIC architecture

    Get PDF
    The increasing failure rate in High Performance Computing encourages the investigation of fault tolerance mechanisms to guarantee the execution of an application in spite of node faults. This paper presents an automatic and scalable fault tolerant model designed to be transparent for applications and for message passing libraries. The model consists of detecting failures in the communication socket caused by a faulty node. In those cases, the affected processes are recovered in a healthy node and the connections are reestablished without losing data. The Redundant Array of Distributed Independent Controllers architecture proposes a decentralized model for all the tasks required in a fault tolerance system: protection, detection, recovery and masking. Decentralized algorithms allow the application to scale, which is a key property for current HPC system. Three different rollback recovery protocols are defined and discussed with the aim of offering alternatives to reduce overhead when multicore systems are used. A prototype has been implemented to carry out an exhaustive experimental evaluation through Master/Worker and Single Program Multiple Data execution models. Multiple workloads and an increasing number of processes have been taken into account to compare the above mentioned protocols. The executions take place in two multicore Linux clusters with different socket communications libraries

    Reliability for exascale computing : system modelling and error mitigation for task-parallel HPC applications

    Get PDF
    As high performance computing (HPC) systems continue to grow, their fault rate increases. Applications running on these systems have to deal with rates on the order of hours or days. Furthermore, some studies for future Exascale systems predict the rates to be on the order of minutes. As a result, efficient fault tolerance solutions are needed to be able to tolerate frequent failures. A fault tolerance solution for future HPC and Exascale systems must be low-cost, efficient and highly scalable. It should have low overhead in fault-free execution and provide fast restart because long-running applications are expected to experience many faults during the execution. Meanwhile task-based dataflow parallel programming models (PM) are becoming a popular paradigm in HPC applications at large scale. For instance, we see the adaptation of task-based dataflow parallelism in OpenMP 4.0, OmpSs PM, Argobots and Intel Threading Building Blocks. In this thesis we propose fault-tolerance solutions for task-parallel dataflow HPC applications. Specifically, first we design and implement a checkpoint/restart and message-logging framework to recover from errors. We then develop performance models to investigate the benefits of our task-level frameworks when integrated with system-wide checkpointing. Moreover, we design and implement selective task replication mechanisms to detect and recover from silent data corruptions in task-parallel dataflow HPC applications. Finally, we introduce a runtime-based coding scheme to detect and recover from memory errors in these applications. Considering the span of all of our schemes, we see that they provide a fairly high failure coverage where both computation and memory is protected against errors.A medida que los Sistemas de Cómputo de Alto rendimiento (HPC por sus siglas en inglés) siguen creciendo, también las tasas de fallos aumentan. Las aplicaciones que se ejecutan en estos sistemas tienen una tasa de fallos que pueden estar en el orden de horas o días. Además, algunos estudios predicen que los fallos estarán en el orden de minutos en los Sistemas Exascale. Por lo tanto, son necesarias soluciones eficientes para la tolerancia a fallos que puedan tolerar fallos frecuentes. Las soluciones para tolerancia a fallos en los Sistemas futuros de HPC y Exascale tienen que ser de bajo costo, eficientes y altamente escalable. El sobrecosto en la ejecución sin fallos debe ser bajo y también se debe proporcionar reinicio rápido, ya que se espera que las aplicaciones de larga duración experimenten muchos fallos durante la ejecución. Por otra parte, los modelos de programación paralelas basados en tareas ordenadas de acuerdo a sus dependencias de datos, se están convirtiendo en un paradigma popular en aplicaciones HPC a gran escala. Por ejemplo, los siguientes modelos de programación paralela incluyen este tipo de modelo de programación OpenMP 4.0, OmpSs, Argobots e Intel Threading Building Blocks. En esta tesis proponemos soluciones de tolerancia a fallos para aplicaciones de HPC programadas en un modelo de programación paralelo basado tareas. Específicamente, en primer lugar, diseñamos e implementamos mecanismos “checkpoint/restart” y “message-logging” para recuperarse de los errores. Para investigar los beneficios de nuestras herramientas a nivel de tarea cuando se integra con los “system-wide checkpointing” se han desarrollado modelos de rendimiento. Por otra parte, diseñamos e implementamos mecanismos de replicación selectiva de tareas que permiten detectar y recuperarse de daños de datos silenciosos en aplicaciones programadas siguiendo el modelo de programación paralela basadas en tareas. Por último, se introduce un esquema de codificación que funciona en tiempo de ejecución para detectar y recuperarse de los errores de la memoria en estas aplicaciones. Todos los esquemas propuestos, en conjunto, proporcionan una cobertura bastante alta a los fallos tanto si estos se producen el cálculo o en la memoria.Postprint (published version

    Incorporating Fault-Tolerant Features into Message-Passing Middleware

    Get PDF
    The popularity of MPI-based middleware and applications has led to their wide deployment. Such systems, however, are not inherently reliable and cannot tolerate external faults. This thesis presents a novel model-based approach for exploiting application features and other characteristics to categorize and create AEMs (Application Execution Model). This work realizes MPI/FT(tm), a middleware derived by selective incorporation of fault-tolerant features into MPI/Pro(tm) for two relevant AEMs. This thesis proves the following hypothesis: it is possible to successfully complete select MPI applications even in the presence of external faults, and such fault-tolerance can be achieved with acceptable performance overhead. This work defines parameters to measure the impact of this middleware on performance through faultree and fault-injected overheads. The hypothesis is validated through experimentation and measurement of sample MPI applications for two AEMs

    A simulation infrastructure for examining the performance of resilience strategies at scale.

    Full text link

    Project Final Report: Ubiquitous Computing and Monitoring System (UCoMS) for Discovery and Management of Energy Resources

    Full text link

    Dynamic Atomic Snapshots

    Get PDF
    Snapshots are useful tools for monitoring big distributed and parallel systems. In this paper, we adapt the well-known atomic snapshot abstraction to dynamic models with an unbounded number of participating processes. Our dynamic snapshot specification extends the API to allow changing the set of processes whose values should be returned from a scan operation. We introduce the ephemeral memory model, which consists of a dynamically changing set of nodes; when a node is removed, its memory can be immediately reclaimed. In this model, we present an algorithm for wait-free dynamic atomic snapshots

    Application-level Fault Tolerance and Resilience in HPC Applications

    Get PDF
    Programa Oficial de Doutoramento en Investigación en Tecnoloxías da Información. 524V01[Resumo] As necesidades computacionais das distintas ramas da ciencia medraron enormemente nos últimos anos, o que provocou un gran crecemento no rendemento proporcionado polos supercomputadores. Cada vez constrúense sistemas de computación de altas prestacións de maior tamaño, con máis recursos hardware de distintos tipos, o que fai que as taxas de fallo destes sistemas tamén medren. Polo tanto, o estudo de técnicas de tolerancia a fallos eficientes é indispensábel para garantires que os programas científicos poidan completar a súa execución, evitando ademais que se dispare o consumo de enerxía. O checkpoint/restart é unha das técnicas máis populares. Sen embargo, a maioría da investigación levada a cabo nas últimas décadas céntrase en estratexias stop-and-restart para aplicacións de memoria distribuída tralo acontecemento dun fallo-parada. Esta tese propón técnicas checkpoint/restart a nivel de aplicación para os modelos de programación paralela roáis populares en supercomputación. Implementáronse protocolos de checkpointing para aplicacións híbridas MPI-OpenMP e aplicacións heteroxéneas baseadas en OpenCL, en ámbolos dous casos prestando especial coidado á portabilidade e maleabilidade da solución. En canto a aplicacións de memoria distribuída, proponse unha solución de resiliencia que pode ser empregada de forma xenérica en aplicacións MPI SPMD, permitindo detectar e reaccionar a fallos-parada sen abortar a execución. Neste caso, os procesos fallidos vólvense a lanzar e o estado da aplicación recupérase cunha volta atrás global. A maiores, esta solución de resiliencia optimizouse implementando unha volta atrás local, na que só os procesos fallidos volven atrás, empregando un protocolo de almacenaxe de mensaxes para garantires a consistencia e o progreso da execución. Por último, propónse a extensión dunha librería de checkpointing para facilitares a implementación de estratexias de recuperación ad hoc ante conupcións de memoria. En moitas ocasións, estos erros poden ser xestionados a nivel de aplicación, evitando desencadear un fallo-parada e permitindo unha recuperación máis eficiente.[Resumen] El rápido aumento de las necesidades de cómputo de distintas ramas de la ciencia ha provocado un gran crecimiento en el rendimiento ofrecido por los supercomputadores. Cada vez se construyen sistemas de computación de altas prestaciones mayores, con más recursos hardware de distintos tipos, lo que hace que las tasas de fallo del sistema aumenten. Por tanto, el estudio de técnicas de tolerancia a fallos eficientes resulta indispensable para garantizar que los programas científicos puedan completar su ejecución, evitando además que se dispare el consumo de energía. La técnica checkpoint/restart es una de las más populares. Sin embargo, la mayor parte de la investigación en este campo se ha centrado en estrategias stop-and-restart para aplicaciones de memoria distribuida tras la ocurrencia de fallos-parada. Esta tesis propone técnicas checkpoint/restart a nivel de aplicación para los modelos de programación paralela más populares en supercomputación. Se han implementado protocolos de checkpointing para aplicaciones híbridas MPI-OpenMP y aplicaciones heterogéneas basadas en OpenCL, prestando en ambos casos especial atención a la portabilidad y la maleabilidad de la solución. Con respecto a aplicaciones de memoria distribuida, se propone una solución de resiliencia que puede ser usada de forma genérica en aplicaciones MPI SPMD, permitiendo detectar y reaccionar a fallosparada sin abortar la ejecución. En su lugar, se vuelven a lanzar los procesos fallidos y se recupera el estado de la aplicación con una vuelta atrás global. A mayores, esta solución de resiliencia ha sido optimizada implementando una vuelta atrás local, en la que solo los procesos fallidos vuelven atrás, empleando un protocolo de almacenaje de mensajes para garantizar la consistencia y el progreso de la ejecución. Por último, se propone una extensión de una librería de checkpointing para facilitar la implementación de estrategias de recuperación ad hoc ante corrupciones de memoria. Muchas veces, este tipo de errores puede gestionarse a nivel de aplicación, evitando desencadenar un fallo-parada y permitiendo una recuperación más eficiente.[Abstract] The rapid increase in the computational demands of science has lead to a pronounced growth in the performance offered by supercomputers. As High Performance Computing (HPC) systems grow larger, including more hardware components of different types, the system's failure rate becomes higher. Efficient fault tolerance techniques are essential not only to ensure the execution completion but also to save energy. Checkpoint/restart is one of the most popular fault tolerance techniques. However, most of the research in this field is focused on stop-and-restart strategies for distributed-memory applications in the event of fail-stop failures. Thís thesis focuses on the implementation of application-level checkpoint/restart solutions for the most popular parallel programming models used in HPC. Hence, we have implemented checkpointing solutions to cope with fail-stop failures in hybrid MPI-OpenMP applications and OpenCL-based programs. Both strategies maximize the restart portability and malleability, ie., the recovery can take place on machines with different CPU / accelerator architectures, and/ or operating systems, and can be adapted to the available resources (number of cores/accelerators). Regarding distributed-memory applications, we propose a resilience solution that can be generally applied to SPMD MPI programs. Resilient applications can detect and react to failures without aborting their execution upon fail-stop failures. Instead, failed processes are re-spawned, and the application state is recovered through a global rollback. Moreover, we have optimized this resilience proposal by implementing a local rollback protocol, in which only failed processes rollback to a previous state, while message logging enables global consistency and further progress of the computation. Finally, we have extended a checkpointing library to facilitate the implementation of ad hoc recovery strategies in the event of soft errors) caused by memory corruptions. Many times, these errors can be handled at the software-Ievel, tIms, avoiding fail-stop failures and enabling a more efficient recovery
    corecore