3 research outputs found

    Migration dynamique d'applications réparties virtualisées dans les fédérations d'infrastructures distribuées

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    Dynamic Migration of virtualized distributed applications in a federation of distributed infrastructure

    Energy-Efficient Interconnection Networks for High-Performance Computing

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    In recent years, energy has become one of the most important factors for de- signing and operating large scale computing systems. This is particularly true in high-performance computing, where systems often consist of thousands of nodes. Especially after the end of Dennard’s scaling, the demand for energy- proportionality in components, where energy is depending linearly on utilization, increases continuously. As the main contributor to the overall power consumption, processors have received the main attention so far. The increasing energy proportionality of processors, however, shifts the focus to other components such as interconnection networks. Their share of the overall power consumption is expected to increase to 20% or more while other components further increase their efficiency in the near future. Hence, it is crucial to improve energy proportionality in interconnection networks likewise to reduce overall power and energy consumption. To facilitate these attempts, this work provides comprehensive studies about energy saving in interconnection networks at different levels. First, interconnection networks differ fundamentally from other components in their underlying technology. To gain a deeper understanding of these differences and to identify targets for energy savings, this work provides a detailed power analysis of current network hardware. Furthermore, various applications at different scales are analyzed regarding their communication patterns and locality properties. The findings show that communication makes up only a small fraction of the execution time and networks are actually idling most of the time. Another observation is that point-to-point communication often only occurs within various small subsets of all participants, which indicates that a coordinated mapping could further decrease network traffic. Based on these studies, three different energy-saving policies are designed, which all differ in their implementation and focus. Then, these policies are evaluated in an event-based, power-aware network simulator. While two policies that operate completely local at link level, enable significant energy savings of more than 90% in most analyses, the hybrid one does not provide further benefits despite significant additional design effort. Additionally, these studies include network design parameters, such as transition time between different link configurations, as well as the three most common topologies in supercomputing systems. The final part of this work addresses the interactions of congestion management and energy-saving policies. Although both network management strategies aim for different goals and use opposite approaches, they complement each other and can increase energy efficiency in all studies as well as improve the performance overhead as opposed to plain energy saving

    Communication Architectures for Scalable GPU-centric Computing Systems

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    In recent years, power consumption has become the main concern in High Performance Computing (HPC). This has lead to heterogeneous computing systems in which Central Processing Units (CPUs) are supported by accelerators, such as Graphics Processing Units (GPUs). While GPUs used to be seen as slave devices to which the main processor offloads computation, today’s systems tend to deploy more GPUs than CPUs. Eventually, the GPU will become a first-class processor, bearing increasing responsibilities. Promoting the GPU to a first-class processor comes with many challenges, such as progress guarantees, dynamic memory management, and scheduling. However, one of the main challenges is the GPU’s inability to orchestrate communication, which is currently entirely handled by the CPU. This work addresses that issue and presents solutions to allow GPUs to source and sink network traffic independently. Many important aspects are addressed, ranging from the application level to how networking hardware is accessed. First, important and large scale exascale applications are studied to further understand their communication behavior and applications’ requirements. Several metrics are presented, including time spent for communication, message sizes, and the length of queues that are required to match messages with receive requests. One aspect the analysis revealed is that messages are becoming smaller at scale, which renders the matching of messages and receive requests an important problem to address. The next part analyzes how the GPU can directly access the network with various communication models being presented and benchmarked. It is shown that a flat address space of distributed GPU memories shows superior bandwidth than put/get communication or CPU-controlled message passing, but less communication can be overlapped with computation. Overall, GPU-controlled communication is always superior, both in terms of time-to-solution and energy spending. The final part addresses communication management on GPUs, which is required to provide high-level communication abstractions. Besides other fundamental building blocks, an algorithm for the message matching is presented that yields similar performance as CPUs. However, it is also shown that the messaging protocol can be relaxed to improve performance significantly, leveraging the massive amount of parallelism provided by the GPU’s architecture
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