7,918 research outputs found
Revisiting Actor Programming in C++
The actor model of computation has gained significant popularity over the
last decade. Its high level of abstraction makes it appealing for concurrent
applications in parallel and distributed systems. However, designing a
real-world actor framework that subsumes full scalability, strong reliability,
and high resource efficiency requires many conceptual and algorithmic additives
to the original model.
In this paper, we report on designing and building CAF, the "C++ Actor
Framework". CAF targets at providing a concurrent and distributed native
environment for scaling up to very large, high-performance applications, and
equally well down to small constrained systems. We present the key
specifications and design concepts---in particular a message-transparent
architecture, type-safe message interfaces, and pattern matching
facilities---that make native actors a viable approach for many robust,
elastic, and highly distributed developments. We demonstrate the feasibility of
CAF in three scenarios: first for elastic, upscaling environments, second for
including heterogeneous hardware like GPGPUs, and third for distributed runtime
systems. Extensive performance evaluations indicate ideal runtime behaviour for
up to 64 cores at very low memory footprint, or in the presence of GPUs. In
these tests, CAF continuously outperforms the competing actor environments
Erlang, Charm++, SalsaLite, Scala, ActorFoundry, and even the OpenMPI.Comment: 33 page
OpenCL Actors - Adding Data Parallelism to Actor-based Programming with CAF
The actor model of computation has been designed for a seamless support of
concurrency and distribution. However, it remains unspecific about data
parallel program flows, while available processing power of modern many core
hardware such as graphics processing units (GPUs) or coprocessors increases the
relevance of data parallelism for general-purpose computation.
In this work, we introduce OpenCL-enabled actors to the C++ Actor Framework
(CAF). This offers a high level interface for accessing any OpenCL device
without leaving the actor paradigm. The new type of actor is integrated into
the runtime environment of CAF and gives rise to transparent message passing in
distributed systems on heterogeneous hardware. Following the actor logic in
CAF, OpenCL kernels can be composed while encapsulated in C++ actors, hence
operate in a multi-stage fashion on data resident at the GPU. Developers are
thus enabled to build complex data parallel programs from primitives without
leaving the actor paradigm, nor sacrificing performance. Our evaluations on
commodity GPUs, an Nvidia TESLA, and an Intel PHI reveal the expected linear
scaling behavior when offloading larger workloads. For sub-second duties, the
efficiency of offloading was found to largely differ between devices. Moreover,
our findings indicate a negligible overhead over programming with the native
OpenCL API.Comment: 28 page
Improving the scalability of parallel N-body applications with an event driven constraint based execution model
The scalability and efficiency of graph applications are significantly
constrained by conventional systems and their supporting programming models.
Technology trends like multicore, manycore, and heterogeneous system
architectures are introducing further challenges and possibilities for emerging
application domains such as graph applications. This paper explores the space
of effective parallel execution of ephemeral graphs that are dynamically
generated using the Barnes-Hut algorithm to exemplify dynamic workloads. The
workloads are expressed using the semantics of an Exascale computing execution
model called ParalleX. For comparison, results using conventional execution
model semantics are also presented. We find improved load balancing during
runtime and automatic parallelism discovery improving efficiency using the
advanced semantics for Exascale computing.Comment: 11 figure
Compiling global name-space programs for distributed execution
Distributed memory machines do not provide hardware support for a global address space. Thus programmers are forced to partition the data across the memories of the architecture and use explicit message passing to communicate data between processors. The compiler support required to allow programmers to express their algorithms using a global name-space is examined. A general method is presented for analysis of a high level source program and along with its translation to a set of independently executing tasks communicating via messages. If the compiler has enough information, this translation can be carried out at compile-time. Otherwise run-time code is generated to implement the required data movement. The analysis required in both situations is described and the performance of the generated code on the Intel iPSC/2 is presented
Iso-energy-efficiency: An approach to power-constrained parallel computation
Future large scale high performance supercomputer systems require high energy efficiency to achieve exaflops computational power and beyond. Despite the need to understand energy efficiency in high-performance systems, there are few techniques to evaluate energy efficiency at scale. In this paper, we propose a system-level iso-energy-efficiency model to analyze, evaluate and predict energy-performance of data intensive parallel applications with various execution patterns running on large scale power-aware clusters. Our analytical model can help users explore the effects of machine and application dependent characteristics on system energy efficiency and isolate efficient ways to scale system parameters (e.g. processor count, CPU power/frequency, workload size and network bandwidth) to balance energy use and performance. We derive our iso-energy-efficiency model and apply it to the NAS Parallel Benchmarks on two power-aware clusters. Our results indicate that the model accurately predicts total system energy consumption within 5% error on average for parallel applications with various execution and communication patterns. We demonstrate effective use of the model for various application contexts and in scalability decision-making
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