perf-optimization.texi 21 KB

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  1. @c -*-texinfo-*-
  2. @c This file is part of the StarPU Handbook.
  3. @c Copyright (C) 2009--2011 Universit@'e de Bordeaux 1
  4. @c Copyright (C) 2010, 2011, 2012 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
  5. @c Copyright (C) 2011 Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et Automatique
  6. @c See the file starpu.texi for copying conditions.
  7. TODO: improve!
  8. @menu
  9. * Data management::
  10. * Task granularity::
  11. * Task submission::
  12. * Task priorities::
  13. * Task scheduling policy::
  14. * Performance model calibration::
  15. * Task distribution vs Data transfer::
  16. * Data prefetch::
  17. * Power-based scheduling::
  18. * Profiling::
  19. * CUDA-specific optimizations::
  20. * Performance debugging::
  21. * Simulated performance::
  22. @end menu
  23. Simply encapsulating application kernels into tasks already permits to
  24. seamlessly support CPU and GPUs at the same time. To achieve good performance, a
  25. few additional changes are needed.
  26. @node Data management
  27. @section Data management
  28. When the application allocates data, whenever possible it should use the
  29. @code{starpu_malloc} function, which will ask CUDA or
  30. OpenCL to make the allocation itself and pin the corresponding allocated
  31. memory. This is needed to permit asynchronous data transfer, i.e. permit data
  32. transfer to overlap with computations. Otherwise, the trace will show that the
  33. @code{DriverCopyAsync} state takes a lot of time, this is because CUDA or OpenCL
  34. then reverts to synchronous transfers.
  35. By default, StarPU leaves replicates of data wherever they were used, in case they
  36. will be re-used by other tasks, thus saving the data transfer time. When some
  37. task modifies some data, all the other replicates are invalidated, and only the
  38. processing unit which ran that task will have a valid replicate of the data. If the application knows
  39. that this data will not be re-used by further tasks, it should advise StarPU to
  40. immediately replicate it to a desired list of memory nodes (given through a
  41. bitmask). This can be understood like the write-through mode of CPU caches.
  42. @cartouche
  43. @smallexample
  44. starpu_data_set_wt_mask(img_handle, 1<<0);
  45. @end smallexample
  46. @end cartouche
  47. will for instance request to always automatically transfer a replicate into the
  48. main memory (node 0), as bit 0 of the write-through bitmask is being set.
  49. @cartouche
  50. @smallexample
  51. starpu_data_set_wt_mask(img_handle, ~0U);
  52. @end smallexample
  53. @end cartouche
  54. will request to always automatically broadcast the updated data to all memory
  55. nodes.
  56. Setting the write-through mask to @code{~0U} can also be useful to make sure all
  57. memory nodes always have a copy of the data, so that it is never evicted when
  58. memory gets scarse.
  59. Implicit data dependency computation can become expensive if a lot
  60. of tasks access the same piece of data. If no dependency is required
  61. on some piece of data (e.g. because it is only accessed in read-only
  62. mode, or because write accesses are actually commutative), use the
  63. @code{starpu_data_set_sequential_consistency_flag} function to disable implicit
  64. dependencies on that data.
  65. In the same vein, accumulation of results in the same data can become a
  66. bottleneck. The use of the @code{STARPU_REDUX} mode permits to optimize such
  67. accumulation (@pxref{Data reduction}).
  68. Applications often need a data just for temporary results. In such a case,
  69. registration can be made without an initial value, for instance this produces a vector data:
  70. @cartouche
  71. @smallexample
  72. starpu_vector_data_register(&handle, -1, 0, n, sizeof(float));
  73. @end smallexample
  74. @end cartouche
  75. StarPU will then allocate the actual buffer only when it is actually needed,
  76. e.g. directly on the GPU without allocating in main memory.
  77. In the same vein, once the temporary results are not useful any more, the
  78. data should be thrown away. If the handle is not to be reused, it can be
  79. unregistered:
  80. @cartouche
  81. @smallexample
  82. starpu_unregister_submit(handle);
  83. @end smallexample
  84. @end cartouche
  85. actual unregistration will be done after all tasks working on the handle
  86. terminate.
  87. If the handle is to be reused, instead of unregistering it, it can simply be invalidated:
  88. @cartouche
  89. @smallexample
  90. starpu_invalidate_submit(handle);
  91. @end smallexample
  92. @end cartouche
  93. the buffers containing the current value will then be freed, and reallocated
  94. only when another task writes some value to the handle.
  95. @node Task granularity
  96. @section Task granularity
  97. Like any other runtime, StarPU has some overhead to manage tasks. Since
  98. it does smart scheduling and data management, that overhead is not always
  99. neglectable. The order of magnitude of the overhead is typically a couple of
  100. microseconds. The amount of work that a task should do should thus be somewhat
  101. bigger, to make sure that the overhead becomes neglectible. The offline
  102. performance feedback can provide a measure of task length, which should thus be
  103. checked if bad performance are observed.
  104. @node Task submission
  105. @section Task submission
  106. To let StarPU make online optimizations, tasks should be submitted
  107. asynchronously as much as possible. Ideally, all the tasks should be
  108. submitted, and mere calls to @code{starpu_task_wait_for_all} or
  109. @code{starpu_data_unregister} be done to wait for
  110. termination. StarPU will then be able to rework the whole schedule, overlap
  111. computation with communication, manage accelerator local memory usage, etc.
  112. @node Task priorities
  113. @section Task priorities
  114. By default, StarPU will consider the tasks in the order they are submitted by
  115. the application. If the application programmer knows that some tasks should
  116. be performed in priority (for instance because their output is needed by many
  117. other tasks and may thus be a bottleneck if not executed early enough), the
  118. @code{priority} field of the task structure should be set to transmit the
  119. priority information to StarPU.
  120. @node Task scheduling policy
  121. @section Task scheduling policy
  122. By default, StarPU uses the @code{eager} simple greedy scheduler. This is
  123. because it provides correct load balance even if the application codelets do not
  124. have performance models. If your application codelets have performance models
  125. (@pxref{Performance model example} for examples showing how to do it),
  126. you should change the scheduler thanks to the @code{STARPU_SCHED} environment
  127. variable. For instance @code{export STARPU_SCHED=dmda} . Use @code{help} to get
  128. the list of available schedulers.
  129. The @b{eager} scheduler uses a central task queue, from which workers draw tasks
  130. to work on. This however does not permit to prefetch data since the scheduling
  131. decision is taken late. If a task has a non-0 priority, it is put at the front of the queue.
  132. The @b{prio} scheduler also uses a central task queue, but sorts tasks by
  133. priority (between -5 and 5).
  134. The @b{random} scheduler distributes tasks randomly according to assumed worker
  135. overall performance.
  136. The @b{ws} (work stealing) scheduler schedules tasks on the local worker by
  137. default. When a worker becomes idle, it steals a task from the most loaded
  138. worker.
  139. The @b{dm} (deque model) scheduler uses task execution performance models into account to
  140. perform an HEFT-similar scheduling strategy: it schedules tasks where their
  141. termination time will be minimal.
  142. The @b{dmda} (deque model data aware) scheduler is similar to dm, it also takes
  143. into account data transfer time.
  144. The @b{dmdar} (deque model data aware ready) scheduler is similar to dmda,
  145. it also sorts tasks on per-worker queues by number of already-available data
  146. buffers.
  147. The @b{dmdas} (deque model data aware sorted) scheduler is similar to dmda, it
  148. also supports arbitrary priority values.
  149. The @b{heft} (heterogeneous earliest finish time) scheduler is similar to dmda, it also supports task bundles.
  150. The @b{pheft} (parallel HEFT) scheduler is similar to heft, it also supports
  151. parallel tasks (still experimental).
  152. The @b{pgreedy} (parallel greedy) scheduler is similar to greedy, it also
  153. supports parallel tasks (still experimental).
  154. @node Performance model calibration
  155. @section Performance model calibration
  156. Most schedulers are based on an estimation of codelet duration on each kind
  157. of processing unit. For this to be possible, the application programmer needs
  158. to configure a performance model for the codelets of the application (see
  159. @ref{Performance model example} for instance). History-based performance models
  160. use on-line calibration. StarPU will automatically calibrate codelets
  161. which have never been calibrated yet, and save the result in
  162. @code{~/.starpu/sampling/codelets} (@code{$USERPROFILE/.starpu/sampling/codelets} in windows environments)
  163. The models are indexed by machine name. To share the models between machines (e.g. for a homogeneous cluster), use @code{export STARPU_HOSTNAME=some_global_name}. To force continuing calibration, use
  164. @code{export STARPU_CALIBRATE=1} . This may be necessary if your application
  165. has not-so-stable performance. StarPU will force calibration (and thus ignore
  166. the current result) until 10 (_STARPU_CALIBRATION_MINIMUM) measurements have been
  167. made on each architecture, to avoid badly scheduling tasks just because the
  168. first measurements were not so good. Details on the current performance model status
  169. can be obtained from the @code{starpu_perfmodel_display} command: the @code{-l}
  170. option lists the available performance models, and the @code{-s} option permits
  171. to choose the performance model to be displayed. The result looks like:
  172. @example
  173. $ starpu_perfmodel_display -s starpu_dlu_lu_model_22
  174. performance model for cpu
  175. # hash size mean dev n
  176. 880805ba 98304 2.731309e+02 6.010210e+01 1240
  177. b50b6605 393216 1.469926e+03 1.088828e+02 1240
  178. 5c6c3401 1572864 1.125983e+04 3.265296e+03 1240
  179. @end example
  180. Which shows that for the LU 22 kernel with a 1.5MiB matrix, the average
  181. execution time on CPUs was about 11ms, with a 3ms standard deviation, over
  182. 1240 samples. It is a good idea to check this before doing actual performance
  183. measurements.
  184. A graph can be drawn by using the @code{starpu_perfmodel_plot}:
  185. @example
  186. $ starpu_perfmodel_plot -s starpu_dlu_lu_model_22
  187. 98304 393216 1572864
  188. $ gnuplot starpu_starpu_dlu_lu_model_22.gp
  189. $ gv starpu_starpu_dlu_lu_model_22.eps
  190. @end example
  191. If a kernel source code was modified (e.g. performance improvement), the
  192. calibration information is stale and should be dropped, to re-calibrate from
  193. start. This can be done by using @code{export STARPU_CALIBRATE=2}.
  194. Note: due to CUDA limitations, to be able to measure kernel duration,
  195. calibration mode needs to disable asynchronous data transfers. Calibration thus
  196. disables data transfer / computation overlapping, and should thus not be used
  197. for eventual benchmarks. Note 2: history-based performance models get calibrated
  198. only if a performance-model-based scheduler is chosen.
  199. The history-based performance models can also be explicitly filled by the
  200. application without execution, if e.g. the application already has a series of
  201. measurements. This can be done by using @code{starpu_perfmodel_update_history},
  202. for instance:
  203. @example
  204. static struct starpu_perfmodel perf_model = @{
  205. .type = STARPU_HISTORY_BASED,
  206. .symbol = "my_perfmodel",
  207. @};
  208. struct starpu_codelet cl = @{
  209. .where = STARPU_CUDA,
  210. .cuda_funcs = @{ cuda_func1, cuda_func2, NULL @},
  211. .nbuffers = 1,
  212. .modes = @{STARPU_W@},
  213. .model = &perf_model
  214. @};
  215. void feed(void) @{
  216. struct my_measure *measure;
  217. struct starpu_task task;
  218. starpu_task_init(&task);
  219. task.cl = &cl;
  220. for (measure = &measures[0]; measure < measures[last]; measure++) @{
  221. starpu_data_handle_t handle;
  222. starpu_vector_data_register(&handle, -1, 0, measure->size, sizeof(float));
  223. task.handles[0] = handle;
  224. starpu_perfmodel_update_history(&perf_model, &task,
  225. STARPU_CUDA_DEFAULT + measure->cudadev, 0,
  226. measure->implementation, measure->time);
  227. starpu_task_clean(&task);
  228. starpu_data_unregister(handle);
  229. @}
  230. @}
  231. @end example
  232. Measurement has to be provided in milliseconds for the completion time models,
  233. and in Joules for the energy consumption models.
  234. @node Task distribution vs Data transfer
  235. @section Task distribution vs Data transfer
  236. Distributing tasks to balance the load induces data transfer penalty. StarPU
  237. thus needs to find a balance between both. The target function that the
  238. @code{dmda} scheduler of StarPU
  239. tries to minimize is @code{alpha * T_execution + beta * T_data_transfer}, where
  240. @code{T_execution} is the estimated execution time of the codelet (usually
  241. accurate), and @code{T_data_transfer} is the estimated data transfer time. The
  242. latter is estimated based on bus calibration before execution start,
  243. i.e. with an idle machine, thus without contention. You can force bus re-calibration by running
  244. @code{starpu_calibrate_bus}. The beta parameter defaults to 1, but it can be
  245. worth trying to tweak it by using @code{export STARPU_SCHED_BETA=2} for instance,
  246. since during real application execution, contention makes transfer times bigger.
  247. This is of course imprecise, but in practice, a rough estimation already gives
  248. the good results that a precise estimation would give.
  249. @node Data prefetch
  250. @section Data prefetch
  251. The @code{heft}, @code{dmda} and @code{pheft} scheduling policies perform data prefetch (see @ref{STARPU_PREFETCH}):
  252. as soon as a scheduling decision is taken for a task, requests are issued to
  253. transfer its required data to the target processing unit, if needeed, so that
  254. when the processing unit actually starts the task, its data will hopefully be
  255. already available and it will not have to wait for the transfer to finish.
  256. The application may want to perform some manual prefetching, for several reasons
  257. such as excluding initial data transfers from performance measurements, or
  258. setting up an initial statically-computed data distribution on the machine
  259. before submitting tasks, which will thus guide StarPU toward an initial task
  260. distribution (since StarPU will try to avoid further transfers).
  261. This can be achieved by giving the @code{starpu_data_prefetch_on_node} function
  262. the handle and the desired target memory node.
  263. @node Power-based scheduling
  264. @section Power-based scheduling
  265. If the application can provide some power performance model (through
  266. the @code{power_model} field of the codelet structure), StarPU will
  267. take it into account when distributing tasks. The target function that
  268. the @code{dmda} scheduler minimizes becomes @code{alpha * T_execution +
  269. beta * T_data_transfer + gamma * Consumption} , where @code{Consumption}
  270. is the estimated task consumption in Joules. To tune this parameter, use
  271. @code{export STARPU_SCHED_GAMMA=3000} for instance, to express that each Joule
  272. (i.e kW during 1000us) is worth 3000us execution time penalty. Setting
  273. @code{alpha} and @code{beta} to zero permits to only take into account power consumption.
  274. This is however not sufficient to correctly optimize power: the scheduler would
  275. simply tend to run all computations on the most energy-conservative processing
  276. unit. To account for the consumption of the whole machine (including idle
  277. processing units), the idle power of the machine should be given by setting
  278. @code{export STARPU_IDLE_POWER=200} for 200W, for instance. This value can often
  279. be obtained from the machine power supplier.
  280. The power actually consumed by the total execution can be displayed by setting
  281. @code{export STARPU_PROFILING=1 STARPU_WORKER_STATS=1} .
  282. On-line task consumption measurement is currently only supported through the
  283. @code{CL_PROFILING_POWER_CONSUMED} OpenCL extension, implemented in the MoviSim
  284. simulator. Applications can however provide explicit measurements by using the
  285. @code{starpu_perfmodel_update_history} function (examplified in @ref{Performance
  286. model example} with the @code{power_model} performance model. Fine-grain
  287. measurement is often not feasible with the feedback provided by the hardware, so
  288. the user can for instance run a given task a thousand times, measure the global
  289. consumption for that series of tasks, divide it by a thousand, repeat for
  290. varying kinds of tasks and task sizes, and eventually feed StarPU
  291. with these manual measurements through @code{starpu_perfmodel_update_history}.
  292. @node Profiling
  293. @section Profiling
  294. A quick view of how many tasks each worker has executed can be obtained by setting
  295. @code{export STARPU_WORKER_STATS=1} This is a convenient way to check that
  296. execution did happen on accelerators without penalizing performance with
  297. the profiling overhead.
  298. A quick view of how much data transfers have been issued can be obtained by setting
  299. @code{export STARPU_BUS_STATS=1} .
  300. More detailed profiling information can be enabled by using @code{export STARPU_PROFILING=1} or by
  301. calling @code{starpu_profiling_status_set} from the source code.
  302. Statistics on the execution can then be obtained by using @code{export
  303. STARPU_BUS_STATS=1} and @code{export STARPU_WORKER_STATS=1} .
  304. More details on performance feedback are provided by the next chapter.
  305. @node CUDA-specific optimizations
  306. @section CUDA-specific optimizations
  307. Due to CUDA limitations, StarPU will have a hard time overlapping its own
  308. communications and the codelet computations if the application does not use a
  309. dedicated CUDA stream for its computations. StarPU provides one by the use of
  310. @code{starpu_cuda_get_local_stream()} which should be used by all CUDA codelet
  311. operations. For instance:
  312. @cartouche
  313. @smallexample
  314. func <<<grid,block,0,starpu_cuda_get_local_stream()>>> (foo, bar);
  315. cudaStreamSynchronize(starpu_cuda_get_local_stream());
  316. @end smallexample
  317. @end cartouche
  318. StarPU already does appropriate calls for the CUBLAS library.
  319. Unfortunately, some CUDA libraries do not have stream variants of
  320. kernels. That will lower the potential for overlapping.
  321. @node Performance debugging
  322. @section Performance debugging
  323. To get an idea of what is happening, a lot of performance feedback is available,
  324. detailed in the next chapter. The various informations should be checked for.
  325. @itemize
  326. @item What does the Gantt diagram look like? (see @ref{Gantt diagram})
  327. @itemize
  328. @item If it's mostly green (running tasks), then the machine is properly
  329. utilized, and perhaps the codelets are just slow. Check their performance, see
  330. @ref{Codelet performance}.
  331. @item If it's mostly purple (FetchingInput), tasks keep waiting for data
  332. transfers, do you perhaps have far more communication than computation? Did
  333. you properly use CUDA streams to make sure communication can be
  334. overlapped? Did you use data-locality aware schedulers to avoid transfers as
  335. much as possible?
  336. @item If it's mostly red (Blocked), tasks keep waiting for dependencies,
  337. do you have enough parallelism? It might be a good idea to check what the DAG
  338. looks like (see @ref{DAG}).
  339. @item If only some workers are completely red (Blocked), for some reason the
  340. scheduler didn't assign tasks to them. Perhaps the performance model is bogus,
  341. check it (see @ref{Codelet performance}). Do all your codelets have a
  342. performance model? When some of them don't, the schedulers switches to a
  343. greedy algorithm which thus performs badly.
  344. @end itemize
  345. @end itemize
  346. You can also use the Temanejo task debugger (see @ref{Task debugger}) to
  347. visualize the task graph more easily.
  348. @node Simulated performance
  349. @section Simulated performance
  350. StarPU can use Simgrid in order to simulate execution on an arbitrary
  351. platform. The idea is to first compile StarPU normally, and run the application,
  352. so as to automatically benchmark the bus and the codelets.
  353. @cartouche
  354. @smallexample
  355. $ ./configure && make
  356. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  357. [starpu][_starpu_load_history_based_model] Warning: model matvecmult is not calibrated, forcing calibration for this run. Use the STARPU_CALIBRATE environment variable to control this.
  358. $ ...
  359. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  360. TEST PASSED
  361. @end smallexample
  362. @end cartouche
  363. Note that we force to use the dmda scheduler to generate performance
  364. models for the application. The application may need to be run several
  365. times before the model is calibrated.
  366. Then, recompile StarPU, passing @code{--enable-simgrid} to @code{./configure}, and re-run the
  367. application, specifying the requested number of devices:
  368. @cartouche
  369. @smallexample
  370. $ ./configure --enable-simgrid && make
  371. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda STARPU_NCPU=12 STARPU_NCUDA=0 STARPU_NOPENCL=1 ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  372. TEST FAILED !!!
  373. @end smallexample
  374. @end cartouche
  375. It is normal that the test fails: since the computation are not actually done
  376. (that is the whole point of simgrid), the result is wrong, of course.
  377. If the performance model is not calibrated enough, the following error
  378. message will be displayed
  379. @cartouche
  380. @smallexample
  381. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda STARPU_NCPU=12 STARPU_NCUDA=0 STARPU_NOPENCL=1 ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  382. [0.000000] [xbt_cfg/INFO] type in variable = 2
  383. [0.000000] [surf_workstation/INFO] surf_workstation_model_init_ptask_L07
  384. [starpu][_starpu_load_history_based_model] Warning: model matvecmult is not calibrated, forcing calibration for this run. Use the STARPU_CALIBRATE environment variable to control this.
  385. [starpu][_starpu_simgrid_execute_job][assert failure] Codelet matvecmult does not have a perfmodel, or is not calibrated enough
  386. $
  387. @end smallexample
  388. @end cartouche
  389. For now, only the number of cpus can be arbitrarily chosen. The number of CUDA
  390. and OpenCL devices have to be lower than the real number on the current machine.
  391. The Simgrid default stack size is small, to increase it use the
  392. parameter @code{--cfg=contexts/stack_size}, for example:
  393. @cartouche
  394. @smallexample
  395. $ STARPU_NCPU=12 STARPU_NCUDA=2 STARPU_NOPENCL=0 ./example --cfg=contexts/stack_size:8192
  396. [0.000000] [xbt_cfg/INFO] type in variable = 2
  397. [0.000000] [surf_workstation/INFO] surf_workstation_model_init_ptask_L07
  398. TEST FAILED !!!
  399. @end smallexample
  400. @end cartouche