382 research outputs found

    Performance optimization of checkpointing schemes with task duplication

    Get PDF
    In checkpointing schemes with task duplication, checkpointing serves two purposes: detecting faults by comparing the processors' states at checkpoints, and reducing fault recovery time by supplying a safe point to rollback to. In this paper, we show that, by tuning the checkpointing schemes to a given architecture, a significant reduction in the execution time can be achieved. The main idea is to use two types of checkpoints: compare-checkpoints (comparing the states of the redundant processes to detect faults) and store-checkpoints (storing the states to reduce recovery time). With two types of checkpoints, we can use both the comparison and storage operations in an efficient way and improve the performance of checkpointing schemes. Results we obtained show that, in some cases, using compare and store checkpoints can reduce the overhead of DMR checkpointing schemes by as much as 30 percent

    Analysis of checkpointing schemes for multiprocessor systems

    Get PDF
    Parallel computing systems provide hardware redundancy that helps to achieve low cost fault-tolerance, by duplicating the task into more than a single processor, and comparing the states of the processors at checkpoints. This paper suggests a novel technique, based on a Markov Reward Model (MRM), for analyzing the performance of checkpointing schemes with task duplication. We show how this technique can be used to derive the average execution time of a task and other important parameters related to the performance of checkpointing schemes. Our analytical results match well the values we obtained using a simulation program. We compare the average task execution time and total work of four checkpointing schemes, and show that generally increasing the number of processors reduces the average execution time, but increases the total work done by the processors. However, in cases where there is a big difference between the time it takes to perform different operations, those results can change

    A Survey of Fault-Tolerance and Fault-Recovery Techniques in Parallel Systems

    Full text link
    Supercomputing systems today often come in the form of large numbers of commodity systems linked together into a computing cluster. These systems, like any distributed system, can have large numbers of independent hardware components cooperating or collaborating on a computation. Unfortunately, any of this vast number of components can fail at any time, resulting in potentially erroneous output. In order to improve the robustness of supercomputing applications in the presence of failures, many techniques have been developed to provide resilience to these kinds of system faults. This survey provides an overview of these various fault-tolerance techniques.Comment: 11 page

    Failure Mitigation in Linear, Sesquilinear and Bijective Operations On Integer Data Streams Via Numerical Entanglement

    Full text link
    A new roll-forward technique is proposed that recovers from any single fail-stop failure in MM integer data streams (M3M\geq3) when undergoing linear, sesquilinear or bijective (LSB) operations, such as: scaling, additions/subtractions, inner or outer vector products and permutations. In the proposed approach, the MM input integer data streams are linearly superimposed to form MM numerically entangled integer data streams that are stored in-place of the original inputs. A series of LSB operations can then be performed directly using these entangled data streams. The output results can be extracted from any M1M-1 entangled output streams by additions and arithmetic shifts, thereby guaranteeing robustness to a fail-stop failure in any single stream computation. Importantly, unlike other methods, the number of operations required for the entanglement, extraction and recovery of the results is linearly related to the number of the inputs and does not depend on the complexity of the performed LSB operations. We have validated our proposal in an Intel processor (Haswell architecture with AVX2 support) via convolution operations. Our analysis and experiments reveal that the proposed approach incurs only 1.8%1.8\% to 2.8%2.8\% reduction in processing throughput in comparison to the failure-intolerant approach. This overhead is 9 to 14 times smaller than that of the equivalent checksum-based method. Thus, our proposal can be used in distributed systems and unreliable processor hardware, or safety-critical applications, where robustness against fail-stop failures becomes a necessity.Comment: Proc. 21st IEEE International On-Line Testing Symposium (IOLTS 2015), July 2015, Halkidiki, Greec

    Rollback recovery with low overhead for fault tolerance in mobile ad hoc networks

    Get PDF
    AbstractMobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) have significantly enhanced the wireless networks by eliminating the need for any fixed infrastructure. Hence, these are increasingly being used for expanding the computing capacity of existing networks or for implementation of autonomous mobile computing Grids. However, the fragile nature of MANETs makes the constituent nodes susceptible to failures and the computing potential of these networks can be utilized only if they are fault tolerant. The technique of checkpointing based rollback recovery has been used effectively for fault tolerance in static and cellular mobile systems; yet, the implementation of existing protocols for MANETs is not straightforward. The paper presents a novel rollback recovery protocol for handling the failures of mobile nodes in a MANET using checkpointing and sender based message logging. The proposed protocol utilizes the routing protocol existing in the network for implementing a low overhead recovery mechanism. The presented recovery procedure at a node is completely domino-free and asynchronous. The protocol is resilient to the dynamic characteristics of the MANET; allowing a distributed application to be executed independently without access to any wired Grid or cellular network access points. We also present an algorithm to record a consistent global snapshot of the MANET
    corecore