27,593 research outputs found
Hierarchical Dynamic Loop Self-Scheduling on Distributed-Memory Systems Using an MPI+MPI Approach
Computationally-intensive loops are the primary source of parallelism in
scientific applications. Such loops are often irregular and a balanced
execution of their loop iterations is critical for achieving high performance.
However, several factors may lead to an imbalanced load execution, such as
problem characteristics, algorithmic, and systemic variations. Dynamic loop
self-scheduling (DLS) techniques are devised to mitigate these factors, and
consequently, improve application performance. On distributed-memory systems,
DLS techniques can be implemented using a hierarchical master-worker execution
model and are, therefore, called hierarchical DLS techniques. These techniques
self-schedule loop iterations at two levels of hardware parallelism: across and
within compute nodes. Hybrid programming approaches that combine the message
passing interface (MPI) with open multi-processing (OpenMP) dominate the
implementation of hierarchical DLS techniques. The MPI-3 standard includes the
feature of sharing memory regions among MPI processes. This feature introduced
the MPI+MPI approach that simplifies the implementation of parallel scientific
applications. The present work designs and implements hierarchical DLS
techniques by exploiting the MPI+MPI approach. Four well-known DLS techniques
are considered in the evaluation proposed herein. The results indicate certain
performance advantages of the proposed approach compared to the hybrid
MPI+OpenMP approach
Dynamic load balancing for the distributed mining of molecular structures
In molecular biology, it is often desirable to find common properties in large numbers of drug candidates. One family of
methods stems from the data mining community, where algorithms to find frequent graphs have received increasing attention over the
past years. However, the computational complexity of the underlying problem and the large amount of data to be explored essentially
render sequential algorithms useless. In this paper, we present a distributed approach to the frequent subgraph mining problem to
discover interesting patterns in molecular compounds. This problem is characterized by a highly irregular search tree, whereby no
reliable workload prediction is available. We describe the three main aspects of the proposed distributed algorithm, namely, a dynamic
partitioning of the search space, a distribution process based on a peer-to-peer communication framework, and a novel receiverinitiated
load balancing algorithm. The effectiveness of the distributed method has been evaluated on the well-known National Cancer
Institute’s HIV-screening data set, where we were able to show close-to linear speedup in a network of workstations. The proposed
approach also allows for dynamic resource aggregation in a non dedicated computational environment. These features make it suitable
for large-scale, multi-domain, heterogeneous environments, such as computational grids
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