2,560 research outputs found
Hybrid static/dynamic scheduling for already optimized dense matrix factorization
We present the use of a hybrid static/dynamic scheduling strategy of the task
dependency graph for direct methods used in dense numerical linear algebra.
This strategy provides a balance of data locality, load balance, and low
dequeue overhead. We show that the usage of this scheduling in communication
avoiding dense factorization leads to significant performance gains. On a 48
core AMD Opteron NUMA machine, our experiments show that we can achieve up to
64% improvement over a version of CALU that uses fully dynamic scheduling, and
up to 30% improvement over the version of CALU that uses fully static
scheduling. On a 16-core Intel Xeon machine, our hybrid static/dynamic
scheduling approach is up to 8% faster than the version of CALU that uses a
fully static scheduling or fully dynamic scheduling. Our algorithm leads to
speedups over the corresponding routines for computing LU factorization in well
known libraries. On the 48 core AMD NUMA machine, our best implementation is up
to 110% faster than MKL, while on the 16 core Intel Xeon machine, it is up to
82% faster than MKL. Our approach also shows significant speedups compared with
PLASMA on both of these systems
Distributed-Memory Breadth-First Search on Massive Graphs
This chapter studies the problem of traversing large graphs using the
breadth-first search order on distributed-memory supercomputers. We consider
both the traditional level-synchronous top-down algorithm as well as the
recently discovered direction optimizing algorithm. We analyze the performance
and scalability trade-offs in using different local data structures such as CSR
and DCSC, enabling in-node multithreading, and graph decompositions such as 1D
and 2D decomposition.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1104.451
A Test Suite for High-Performance Parallel Java
The Java programming language has a number of features that make it attractive for writing high-quality, portable parallel programs. A pure object formulation, strong typing and the exception model make programs easier to create, debug, and maintain. The elegant threading provides a simple route to parallelism on shared-memory machines. Anticipating great improvements in numerical performance, this paper presents a suite of simple programs that indicate how a pure Java Navier-Stokes solver might perform. The suite includes a parallel Euler solver. We present results from a 32-processor Hewlett-Packard machine and a 4-processor Sun server. While speedup is excellent on both machines, indicating a high-quality thread scheduler, the single-processor performance needs much improvement
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