18 research outputs found
Multi-Tenant Virtual GPUs for Optimising Performance of a Financial Risk Application
Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) are becoming popular accelerators in modern
High-Performance Computing (HPC) clusters. Installing GPUs on each node of the
cluster is not efficient resulting in high costs and power consumption as well
as underutilisation of the accelerator. The research reported in this paper is
motivated towards the use of few physical GPUs by providing cluster nodes
access to remote GPUs on-demand for a financial risk application. We
hypothesise that sharing GPUs between several nodes, referred to as
multi-tenancy, reduces the execution time and energy consumed by an
application. Two data transfer modes between the CPU and the GPUs, namely
concurrent and sequential, are explored. The key result from the experiments is
that multi-tenancy with few physical GPUs using sequential data transfers
lowers the execution time and the energy consumed, thereby improving the
overall performance of the application.Comment: Accepted to the Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing (JPDC),
10 June 201
Acceleration-as-a-Service: Exploiting Virtualised GPUs for a Financial Application
'How can GPU acceleration be obtained as a service in a cluster?' This
question has become increasingly significant due to the inefficiency of
installing GPUs on all nodes of a cluster. The research reported in this paper
is motivated to address the above question by employing rCUDA (remote CUDA), a
framework that facilitates Acceleration-as-a-Service (AaaS), such that the
nodes of a cluster can request the acceleration of a set of remote GPUs on
demand. The rCUDA framework exploits virtualisation and ensures that multiple
nodes can share the same GPU. In this paper we test the feasibility of the
rCUDA framework on a real-world application employed in the financial risk
industry that can benefit from AaaS in the production setting. The results
confirm the feasibility of rCUDA and highlight that rCUDA achieves similar
performance compared to CUDA, provides consistent results, and more
importantly, allows for a single application to benefit from all the GPUs
available in the cluster without loosing efficiency.Comment: 11th IEEE International Conference on eScience (IEEE eScience) -
Munich, Germany, 201
Mitochondrial physiology
As the knowledge base and importance of mitochondrial physiology to evolution, health and disease expands, the necessity for harmonizing the terminology concerning mitochondrial respiratory states and rates has become increasingly apparent. The chemiosmotic theory establishes the mechanism of energy transformation and coupling in oxidative phosphorylation. The unifying concept of the protonmotive force provides the framework for developing a consistent theoretical foundation of mitochondrial physiology and bioenergetics. We follow the latest SI guidelines and those of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) on terminology in physical chemistry, extended by considerations of open systems and thermodynamics of irreversible processes. The concept-driven constructive terminology incorporates the meaning of each quantity and aligns concepts and symbols with the nomenclature of classical bioenergetics. We endeavour to provide a balanced view of mitochondrial respiratory control and a critical discussion on reporting data of mitochondrial respiration in terms of metabolic flows and fluxes. Uniform standards for evaluation of respiratory states and rates will ultimately contribute to reproducibility between laboratories and thus support the development of data repositories of mitochondrial respiratory function in species, tissues, and cells. Clarity of concept and consistency of nomenclature facilitate effective transdisciplinary communication, education, and ultimately further discovery
Mitochondrial physiology
As the knowledge base and importance of mitochondrial physiology to evolution, health and disease expands, the necessity for harmonizing the terminology concerning mitochondrial respiratory states and rates has become increasingly apparent. The chemiosmotic theory establishes the mechanism of energy transformation and coupling in oxidative phosphorylation. The unifying concept of the protonmotive force provides the framework for developing a consistent theoretical foundation of mitochondrial physiology and bioenergetics. We follow the latest SI guidelines and those of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) on terminology in physical chemistry, extended by considerations of open systems and thermodynamics of irreversible processes. The concept-driven constructive terminology incorporates the meaning of each quantity and aligns concepts and symbols with the nomenclature of classical bioenergetics. We endeavour to provide a balanced view of mitochondrial respiratory control and a critical discussion on reporting data of mitochondrial respiration in terms of metabolic flows and fluxes. Uniform standards for evaluation of respiratory states and rates will ultimately contribute to reproducibility between laboratories and thus support the development of data repositories of mitochondrial respiratory function in species, tissues, and cells. Clarity of concept and consistency of nomenclature facilitate effective transdisciplinary communication, education, and ultimately further discovery
Multi-tenant virtual GPUs for optimising performance of a financial risk application
[EN] Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) are becoming popular accelerators in modern High-Performance Computing (HPC) clusters. Installing GPUs on each node of the cluster is not efficient resulting in high costs and power consumption as well as underutilisation of the accelerator. The research reported in this paper is motivated towards the use of few physical GPUs by providing cluster nodes access to remote GPUs on-demand for a financial risk application. We hypothesise that sharing GPUs between several nodes, referred to as multi-tenancy, reduces the execution time and energy consumed by an application. Two data transfer modes between the CPU and the GPUs, namely concurrent and sequential, are explored. The key result from the experiments is that multi-tenancy with few physical GPUs using sequential data transfers lowers the execution time and the energy consumed, thereby improving the overall performance of the application.Prades Gasulla, J.; Varghese, B.; Reaño González, C.; Silla Jiménez, F. (2017). Multi-tenant virtual GPUs for optimising performance of a financial risk application. Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing. 108:28-44. doi:10.1016/j.jpdc.2016.06.002S284410