78 research outputs found

    Direct NN-body code on low-power embedded ARM GPUs

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    This work arises on the environment of the ExaNeSt project aiming at design and development of an exascale ready supercomputer with low energy consumption profile but able to support the most demanding scientific and technical applications. The ExaNeSt compute unit consists of densely-packed low-power 64-bit ARM processors, embedded within Xilinx FPGA SoCs. SoC boards are heterogeneous architecture where computing power is supplied both by CPUs and GPUs, and are emerging as a possible low-power and low-cost alternative to clusters based on traditional CPUs. A state-of-the-art direct NN-body code suitable for astrophysical simulations has been re-engineered in order to exploit SoC heterogeneous platforms based on ARM CPUs and embedded GPUs. Performance tests show that embedded GPUs can be effectively used to accelerate real-life scientific calculations, and that are promising also because of their energy efficiency, which is a crucial design in future exascale platforms.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the Computing Conference 2019 proceeding

    A low complexity scaling method for the Lanczos Kernel in fixed-point arithmetic

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    We consider the problem of enabling fixed-point implementation of linear algebra kernels on low-cost embedded systems, as well as motivating more efficient computational architectures for scientific applications. Fixed-point arithmetic presents additional design challenges compared to floating-point arithmetic, such as having to bound peak values of variables and control their dynamic ranges. Algorithms for solving linear equations or finding eigenvalues are typically nonlinear and iterative, making solving these design challenges a nontrivial task. For these types of algorithms, the bounding problem cannot be automated by current tools. We focus on the Lanczos iteration, the heart of well-known methods such as conjugate gradient and minimum residual. We show how one can modify the algorithm with a low-complexity scaling procedure to allow us to apply standard linear algebra to derive tight analytical bounds on all variables of the process, regardless of the properties of the original matrix. It is shown that the numerical behavior of fixed-point implementations of the modified problem can be chosen to be at least as good as a floating-point implementation, if necessary. The approach is evaluated on field-programmable gate array (FPGA) platforms, highlighting orders of magnitude potential performance and efficiency improvements by moving form floating-point to fixed-point computation

    GPUにおける拡張精度浮動小数点演算を用いた線形計算の研究

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    筑波大学 (University of Tsukuba)201

    Custom optimization algorithms for efficient hardware implementation

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    The focus is on real-time optimal decision making with application in advanced control systems. These computationally intensive schemes, which involve the repeated solution of (convex) optimization problems within a sampling interval, require more efficient computational methods than currently available for extending their application to highly dynamical systems and setups with resource-constrained embedded computing platforms. A range of techniques are proposed to exploit synergies between digital hardware, numerical analysis and algorithm design. These techniques build on top of parameterisable hardware code generation tools that generate VHDL code describing custom computing architectures for interior-point methods and a range of first-order constrained optimization methods. Since memory limitations are often important in embedded implementations we develop a custom storage scheme for KKT matrices arising in interior-point methods for control, which reduces memory requirements significantly and prevents I/O bandwidth limitations from affecting the performance in our implementations. To take advantage of the trend towards parallel computing architectures and to exploit the special characteristics of our custom architectures we propose several high-level parallel optimal control schemes that can reduce computation time. A novel optimization formulation was devised for reducing the computational effort in solving certain problems independent of the computing platform used. In order to be able to solve optimization problems in fixed-point arithmetic, which is significantly more resource-efficient than floating-point, tailored linear algebra algorithms were developed for solving the linear systems that form the computational bottleneck in many optimization methods. These methods come with guarantees for reliable operation. We also provide finite-precision error analysis for fixed-point implementations of first-order methods that can be used to minimize the use of resources while meeting accuracy specifications. The suggested techniques are demonstrated on several practical examples, including a hardware-in-the-loop setup for optimization-based control of a large airliner.Open Acces

    An FPGA implementation of an investigative many-core processor, Fynbos : in support of a Fortran autoparallelising software pipeline

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    Includes bibliographical references.In light of the power, memory, ILP, and utilisation walls facing the computing industry, this work examines the hypothetical many-core approach to finding greater compute performance and efficiency. In order to achieve greater efficiency in an environment in which Moore’s law continues but TDP has been capped, a means of deriving performance from dark and dim silicon is needed. The many-core hypothesis is one approach to exploiting these available transistors efficiently. As understood in this work, it involves trading in hardware control complexity for hundreds to thousands of parallel simple processing elements, and operating at a clock speed sufficiently low as to allow the efficiency gains of near threshold voltage operation. Performance is there- fore dependant on exploiting a new degree of fine-grained parallelism such as is currently only found in GPGPUs, but in a manner that is not as restrictive in application domain range. While removing the complex control hardware of traditional CPUs provides space for more arithmetic hardware, a basic level of control is still required. For a number of reasons this work chooses to replace this control largely with static scheduling. This pushes the burden of control primarily to the software and specifically the compiler, rather not to the programmer or to an application specific means of control simplification. An existing legacy tool chain capable of autoparallelising sequential Fortran code to the degree of parallelism necessary for many-core exists. This work implements a many-core architecture to match it. Prototyping the design on an FPGA, it is possible to examine the real world performance of the compiler-architecture system to a greater degree than simulation only would allow. Comparing theoretical peak performance and real performance in a case study application, the system is found to be more efficient than any other reviewed, but to also significantly under perform relative to current competing architectures. This failing is apportioned to taking the need for simple hardware too far, and an inability to implement static scheduling mitigating tactics due to lack of support for such in the compiler

    Enabling the use of embedded and mobile technologies for high-performance computing

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    In the late 1990s, powerful economic forces led to the adoption of commodity desktop processors in High-Performance Computing(HPC). This transformation has been so effective that the November 2016 TOP500 list is still dominated by x86 architecture. In 2016, the largest commodity market in computing is not PCs or servers, but mobile computing, comprising smartphones andtablets, most of which are built with ARM-based Systems on Chips (SoC). This suggests that once mobile SoCs deliver sufficient performance, mobile SoCs can help reduce the cost of HPC. This thesis addresses this question in detail.We analyze the trend in mobile SoC performance, comparing it with the similar trend in the 1990s. Through development of real system prototypes and their performance analysis we assess the feasibility of building an HPCsystem based on mobile SoCs. Through simulation of the future mobile SoC, we identify the missing features and suggest improvements that would enable theuse of future mobile SoCs in HPC environment. Thus, we present design guidelines for future generations mobile SoCs, and HPC systems built around them, enabling the newclass of cheap supercomputers.A finales de la década de los 90, razones económicas llevaron a la adopción de procesadores de uso general en sistemas de Computación de Altas Prestaciones (HPC). Esta transformación ha sido tan efectiva que la lista TOP500 de noviembre de 2016 sigue aun dominada por la arquitectura x86. En 2016, el mayor mercado de productos básicos en computación no son los ordenadores de sobremesa o los servidores, sino la computación móvil, que incluye teléfonos inteligentes y tabletas, la mayoría de los cuales están construidos con sistemas en chip(SoC) de arquitectura ARM. Esto sugiere que una vez que los SoC móviles ofrezcan un rendimiento suficiente, podrán utilizarse para reducir el costo desistemas HPC. Esta tesis aborda esta cuestión en detalle. Analizamos la tendencia del rendimiento de los SoC para móvil, comparándola con la tendencia similar ocurrida en los añosnoventa. A través del desarrollo de prototipos de sistemas reales y su análisis de rendimiento, evaluamos la factibilidad de construir unsistema HPC basado en SoCs móviles. A través de la simulación de SoCs móviles futuros, identificamos las características que faltan y sugerimos mejoras quepermitirían su uso en entornos HPC. Por lo tanto, presentamos directrices de diseño para futuras generaciones de SoCs móviles y sistemas HPC construidos a sualrededor, para permitir la construcción de una nueva clase de supercomputadores de coste reducido

    Green Wave : A Semi Custom Hardware Architecture for Reverse Time Migration

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    Over the course of the last few decades the scientific community greatly benefited from steady advances in compute performance. Until the early 2000's this performance improvement was achieved through rising clock rates. This enabled plug-n-play performance improvements for all codes. In 2005 the stagnation of CPU clock rates drove the computing hardware manufactures to attain future performance through explicit parallelism. Now the HPC community faces a new, even bigger challenge. So far performance gains were achieved through replication of general-purpose cores and nodes. Unfortunately, rising cluster sizes resulted in skyrocketing energy costs - a paradigm change in HPC architecture design is inevitable. In combination with the increasing costs of data movement, the HPC community started exploring alternatives like GPUs and large arrays of simple, low-power cores (e.g. BlueGene) to offer the better performance per Watt and greatest scalability. As in general science, the seismic community faces large-scale, complex computational challenges that can only be limited solved with available compute capabilities. Such challenges include the physically correct modeling of subsurface rock layers. This thesis analyzes the requirements and performance of isotropic (ISO), vertical transverse isotropic (VTI) and tilted transverse isotropic (TTI) wave propagation kernels as they appear in the Reverse Time Migration (RTM) imaging method. It finds that even with leading-edge, commercial off-the-shelf hardware, large-scale survey sizes cannot be imaged within reasonable time and power constraints. This thesis uses a novel architecture design method leveraging a hardware/software co-design approach, adopted from the mobile- and embedded market, for HPC. The methodology tailors an architecture design to a class of applications without loss of generality like in full custom designs. This approach was first applied in the Green Flash project, which proved that the co-design approach has the potential for high energy efficiency gains. This thesis presents the novel Green Wave architecture that is derived from the Green Flash project. Rather than focusing on climate codes, like Green Flash, Green Wave chooses RTM wave propagation kernels as its target application. Thus, the goal of the application-driven, co-design Green Wave approach, is to enable full programmability while allowing greater computational efficiency than general-purpose processors or GPUs by offering custom extensions to the processor's ISA and correctly sizing software-managed memories and an efficient on-chip network interconnect. The lowest level building blocks of the Green Wave design are pre-verified IP components. This minimizes the amount of custom logic in the design, which in turn reduces verification costs and design uncertainty. In this thesis three Green Wave architecture designs derived from ISO, VTI and TTI kernel analysis are introduced. Further, a programming model is proposed capable of hiding all communication latencies. With production-strength, cycle-accurate hardware simulators Green Wave's performance is benchmarked and its performance compared to leading on-market systems from Intel, AMD and NVidia. Based on a large-scale example survey, the results show that Green Wave has the potential of an energy efficiency improvement of 5x compared to x86 and 1.4x-4x to GPU-based clusters for ISO, VTI and TTI kernels
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