5,066 research outputs found
GPUs as Storage System Accelerators
Massively multicore processors, such as Graphics Processing Units (GPUs),
provide, at a comparable price, a one order of magnitude higher peak
performance than traditional CPUs. This drop in the cost of computation, as any
order-of-magnitude drop in the cost per unit of performance for a class of
system components, triggers the opportunity to redesign systems and to explore
new ways to engineer them to recalibrate the cost-to-performance relation. This
project explores the feasibility of harnessing GPUs' computational power to
improve the performance, reliability, or security of distributed storage
systems. In this context, we present the design of a storage system prototype
that uses GPU offloading to accelerate a number of computationally intensive
primitives based on hashing, and introduce techniques to efficiently leverage
the processing power of GPUs. We evaluate the performance of this prototype
under two configurations: as a content addressable storage system that
facilitates online similarity detection between successive versions of the same
file and as a traditional system that uses hashing to preserve data integrity.
Further, we evaluate the impact of offloading to the GPU on competing
applications' performance. Our results show that this technique can bring
tangible performance gains without negatively impacting the performance of
concurrently running applications.Comment: IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems, 201
TensorFlow Doing HPC
TensorFlow is a popular emerging open-source programming framework supporting
the execution of distributed applications on heterogeneous hardware. While
TensorFlow has been initially designed for developing Machine Learning (ML)
applications, in fact TensorFlow aims at supporting the development of a much
broader range of application kinds that are outside the ML domain and can
possibly include HPC applications. However, very few experiments have been
conducted to evaluate TensorFlow performance when running HPC workloads on
supercomputers. This work addresses this lack by designing four traditional HPC
benchmark applications: STREAM, matrix-matrix multiply, Conjugate Gradient (CG)
solver and Fast Fourier Transform (FFT). We analyze their performance on two
supercomputers with accelerators and evaluate the potential of TensorFlow for
developing HPC applications. Our tests show that TensorFlow can fully take
advantage of high performance networks and accelerators on supercomputers.
Running our TensorFlow STREAM benchmark, we obtain over 50% of theoretical
communication bandwidth on our testing platform. We find an approximately 2x,
1.7x and 1.8x performance improvement when increasing the number of GPUs from
two to four in the matrix-matrix multiply, CG and FFT applications
respectively. All our performance results demonstrate that TensorFlow has high
potential of emerging also as HPC programming framework for heterogeneous
supercomputers.Comment: Accepted for publication at The Ninth International Workshop on
Accelerators and Hybrid Exascale Systems (AsHES'19
Memory and Parallelism Analysis Using a Platform-Independent Approach
Emerging computing architectures such as near-memory computing (NMC) promise
improved performance for applications by reducing the data movement between CPU
and memory. However, detecting such applications is not a trivial task. In this
ongoing work, we extend the state-of-the-art platform-independent software
analysis tool with NMC related metrics such as memory entropy, spatial
locality, data-level, and basic-block-level parallelism. These metrics help to
identify the applications more suitable for NMC architectures.Comment: 22nd ACM International Workshop on Software and Compilers for
Embedded Systems (SCOPES '19), May 201
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