101_building.doxy 14 KB

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  1. /* StarPU --- Runtime system for heterogeneous multicore architectures.
  2. *
  3. * Copyright (C) 2010-2017 CNRS
  4. * Copyright (C) 2009-2011,2013-2016 Université de Bordeaux
  5. * Copyright (C) 2011-2012 Inria
  6. *
  7. * StarPU is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  8. * it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
  9. * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at
  10. * your option) any later version.
  11. *
  12. * StarPU is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
  13. * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  14. * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
  15. *
  16. * See the GNU Lesser General Public License in COPYING.LGPL for more details.
  17. */
  18. /*! \page BuildingAndInstallingStarPU Building and Installing StarPU
  19. \section InstallingABinaryPackage Installing a Binary Package
  20. One of the StarPU developers being a Debian Developer, the packages
  21. are well integrated and very uptodate. To see which packages are
  22. available, simply type:
  23. \verbatim
  24. $ apt-cache search starpu
  25. \endverbatim
  26. To install what you need, type for example:
  27. \verbatim
  28. $ sudo apt-get install libstarpu-1.3 libstarpu-dev
  29. \endverbatim
  30. \section InstallingFromSource Installing from Source
  31. StarPU can be built and installed by the standard means of the GNU
  32. autotools. The following chapter is intended to briefly remind how these tools
  33. can be used to install StarPU.
  34. \subsection OptionalDependencies Optional Dependencies
  35. The <c>hwloc</c> (http://www.open-mpi.org/software/hwloc) topology
  36. discovery library is not mandatory to use StarPU but strongly
  37. recommended. It allows for topology aware scheduling, which improves
  38. performance. <c>libhwloc</c> is available in major free operating system
  39. distributions, and for most operating systems.
  40. If <c>libhwloc</c> is not available on your system, the option
  41. \ref without-hwloc "--without-hwloc" should be explicitely given when calling the
  42. <c>configure</c> script. If <c>libhwloc</c> is installed in a standard
  43. location, no option is required, it will be detected automatically,
  44. otherwise \ref with-hwloc "--with-hwloc=<directory>" should be used to specify its
  45. location.
  46. \subsection GettingSources Getting Sources
  47. StarPU's sources can be obtained from the download page of
  48. the StarPU website (http://starpu.gforge.inria.fr/files/).
  49. All releases and the development tree of StarPU are freely available
  50. on Inria's gforge under the LGPL license. Some releases are available
  51. under the BSD license.
  52. The latest release can be downloaded from the Inria's gforge (http://gforge.inria.fr/frs/?group_id=1570) or
  53. directly from the StarPU download page (http://starpu.gforge.inria.fr/files/).
  54. The latest nightly snapshot can be downloaded from the StarPU gforge website (http://starpu.gforge.inria.fr/testing/).
  55. \verbatim
  56. $ wget http://starpu.gforge.inria.fr/testing/starpu-nightly-latest.tar.gz
  57. \endverbatim
  58. And finally, current development version is also accessible via svn.
  59. It should be used only if you need the very latest changes (i.e. less
  60. than a day!). Note that the client side of the software Subversion can
  61. be obtained from http://subversion.tigris.org. If you
  62. are running on Windows, you will probably prefer to use TortoiseSVN (http://tortoisesvn.tigris.org/).
  63. \verbatim
  64. $ svn checkout svn://scm.gforge.inria.fr/svn/starpu/trunk StarPU
  65. \endverbatim
  66. \subsection ConfiguringStarPU Configuring StarPU
  67. Running <c>autogen.sh</c> is not necessary when using the tarball
  68. releases of StarPU. If you are using the source code from the svn
  69. repository, you first need to generate the configure scripts and the
  70. Makefiles. This requires the availability of <c>autoconf</c> and
  71. <c>automake</c> >= 2.60.
  72. \verbatim
  73. $ ./autogen.sh
  74. \endverbatim
  75. You then need to configure StarPU. Details about options that are
  76. useful to give to <c>./configure</c> are given in \ref CompilationConfiguration.
  77. \verbatim
  78. $ ./configure
  79. \endverbatim
  80. If <c>configure</c> does not detect some software or produces errors, please
  81. make sure to post the contents of the file <c>config.log</c> when
  82. reporting the issue.
  83. By default, the files produced during the compilation are placed in
  84. the source directory. As the compilation generates a lot of files, it
  85. is advised to put them all in a separate directory. It is then
  86. easier to cleanup, and this allows to compile several configurations
  87. out of the same source tree. For that, simply enter the directory
  88. where you want the compilation to produce its files, and invoke the
  89. <c>configure</c> script located in the StarPU source directory.
  90. \verbatim
  91. $ mkdir build
  92. $ cd build
  93. $ ../configure
  94. \endverbatim
  95. By default, StarPU will be installed in <c>/usr/local/bin</c>,
  96. <c>/usr/local/lib</c>, etc. You can specify an installation prefix
  97. other than <c>/usr/local</c> using the option <c>--prefix</c>, for
  98. instance:
  99. \verbatim
  100. $ ../configure --prefix=$HOME/starpu
  101. \endverbatim
  102. \subsection BuildingStarPU Building StarPU
  103. \verbatim
  104. $ make
  105. \endverbatim
  106. Once everything is built, you may want to test the result. An
  107. extensive set of regression tests is provided with StarPU. Running the
  108. tests is done by calling <c>make check</c>. These tests are run every night
  109. and the result from the main profile is publicly available (http://starpu.gforge.inria.fr/testing/).
  110. \verbatim
  111. $ make check
  112. \endverbatim
  113. \subsection InstallingStarPU Installing StarPU
  114. In order to install StarPU at the location that was specified during
  115. configuration:
  116. \verbatim
  117. $ make install
  118. \endverbatim
  119. Libtool interface versioning information are included in
  120. libraries names (<c>libstarpu-1.3.so</c>, <c>libstarpumpi-1.3.so</c> and
  121. <c>libstarpufft-1.3.so</c>).
  122. \section SettingUpYourOwnCode Setting up Your Own Code
  123. \subsection SettingFlagsForCompilingLinkingAndRunningApplications Setting Flags for Compiling, Linking and Running Applications
  124. StarPU provides a <c>pkg-config</c> executable to obtain relevant compiler
  125. and linker flags. As compiling and linking an application against
  126. StarPU may require to use specific flags or libraries (for instance
  127. <c>CUDA</c> or <c>libspe2</c>).
  128. If StarPU was not installed at some standard location, the path of StarPU's
  129. library must be specified in the environment variable <c>PKG_CONFIG_PATH</c> so
  130. that <c>pkg-config</c> can find it. For example if StarPU was installed in
  131. <c>$STARPU_PATH</c>:
  132. \verbatim
  133. $ PKG_CONFIG_PATH=$PKG_CONFIG_PATH:$STARPU_PATH/lib/pkgconfig
  134. \endverbatim
  135. The flags required to compile or link against StarPU are then
  136. accessible with the following commands:
  137. \verbatim
  138. $ pkg-config --cflags starpu-1.3 # options for the compiler
  139. $ pkg-config --libs starpu-1.3 # options for the linker
  140. \endverbatim
  141. Note that it is still possible to use the API provided in the version
  142. 1.0 of StarPU by calling <c>pkg-config</c> with the <c>starpu-1.0</c> package.
  143. Similar packages are provided for <c>starpumpi-1.0</c> and <c>starpufft-1.0</c>.
  144. It is also possible to use the API provided in the version
  145. 0.9 of StarPU by calling <c>pkg-config</c> with the <c>libstarpu</c> package.
  146. Similar packages are provided for <c>libstarpumpi</c> and <c>libstarpufft</c>.
  147. Make sure that <c>pkg-config --libs starpu-1.3</c> actually produces some output
  148. before going further: <c>PKG_CONFIG_PATH</c> has to point to the place where
  149. <c>starpu-1.3.pc</c> was installed during <c>make install</c>.
  150. Also pass the option <c>--static</c> if the application is to be
  151. linked statically.
  152. It is also necessary to set the environment variable <c>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</c> to
  153. locate dynamic libraries at runtime.
  154. \verbatim
  155. $ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$STARPU_PATH/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
  156. \endverbatim
  157. When using a Makefile, the following lines can be added to set the
  158. options for the compiler and the linker:
  159. \verbatim
  160. CFLAGS += $$(pkg-config --cflags starpu-1.3)
  161. LDFLAGS += $$(pkg-config --libs starpu-1.3)
  162. \endverbatim
  163. \subsection RunningABasicStarPUApplication Running a Basic StarPU Application
  164. Basic examples using StarPU are built in the directory
  165. <c>examples/basic_examples/</c> (and installed in
  166. <c>$STARPU_PATH/lib/starpu/examples/</c>). You can for example run the example
  167. <c>vector_scal</c>.
  168. \verbatim
  169. $ ./examples/basic_examples/vector_scal
  170. BEFORE: First element was 1.000000
  171. AFTER: First element is 3.140000
  172. \endverbatim
  173. When StarPU is used for the first time, the directory
  174. <c>$STARPU_HOME/.starpu/</c> is created, performance models will be stored in
  175. that directory (\ref STARPU_HOME).
  176. Please note that buses are benchmarked when StarPU is launched for the
  177. first time. This may take a few minutes, or less if <c>libhwloc</c> is
  178. installed. This step is done only once per user and per machine.
  179. \subsection RunningABasicStarPUApplicationOnMicrosoft Running a Basic StarPU Application on Microsoft Visual C
  180. Batch files are provided to run StarPU applications under Microsoft
  181. Visual C. They are installed in <c>$STARPU_PATH/bin/msvc</c>.
  182. To execute a StarPU application, you first need to set the environment
  183. variable \ref STARPU_PATH.
  184. \verbatim
  185. c:\....> cd c:\cygwin\home\ci\starpu\
  186. c:\....> set STARPU_PATH=c:\cygwin\home\ci\starpu\
  187. c:\....> cd bin\msvc
  188. c:\....> starpu_open.bat starpu_simple.c
  189. \endverbatim
  190. The batch script will run Microsoft Visual C with a basic project file
  191. to run the given application.
  192. The batch script <c>starpu_clean.bat</c> can be used to delete all
  193. compilation generated files.
  194. The batch script <c>starpu_exec.bat</c> can be used to compile and execute a
  195. StarPU application from the command prompt.
  196. \verbatim
  197. c:\....> cd c:\cygwin\home\ci\starpu\
  198. c:\....> set STARPU_PATH=c:\cygwin\home\ci\starpu\
  199. c:\....> cd bin\msvc
  200. c:\....> starpu_exec.bat ..\..\..\..\examples\basic_examples\hello_world.c
  201. \endverbatim
  202. \verbatim
  203. MSVC StarPU Execution
  204. ...
  205. /out:hello_world.exe
  206. ...
  207. Hello world (params = {1, 2.00000})
  208. Callback function got argument 0000042
  209. c:\....>
  210. \endverbatim
  211. \subsection KernelThreadsStartedByStarPU Kernel Threads Started by StarPU
  212. StarPU automatically binds one thread per CPU core. It does not use
  213. SMT/hyperthreading because kernels are usually already optimized for using a
  214. full core, and using hyperthreading would make kernel calibration rather random.
  215. Since driving GPUs is a CPU-consuming task, StarPU dedicates one core
  216. per GPU.
  217. While StarPU tasks are executing, the application is not supposed to do
  218. computations in the threads it starts itself, tasks should be used instead.
  219. TODO: add a StarPU function to bind an application thread (e.g. the main thread)
  220. to a dedicated core (and thus disable the corresponding StarPU CPU worker).
  221. \subsection EnablingOpenCL Enabling OpenCL
  222. When both CUDA and OpenCL drivers are enabled, StarPU will launch an
  223. OpenCL worker for NVIDIA GPUs only if CUDA is not already running on them.
  224. This design choice was necessary as OpenCL and CUDA can not run at the
  225. same time on the same NVIDIA GPU, as there is currently no interoperability
  226. between them.
  227. To enable OpenCL, you need either to disable CUDA when configuring StarPU:
  228. \verbatim
  229. $ ./configure --disable-cuda
  230. \endverbatim
  231. or when running applications:
  232. \verbatim
  233. $ STARPU_NCUDA=0 ./application
  234. \endverbatim
  235. OpenCL will automatically be started on any device not yet used by
  236. CUDA. So on a machine running 4 GPUS, it is therefore possible to
  237. enable CUDA on 2 devices, and OpenCL on the 2 other devices by doing
  238. so:
  239. \verbatim
  240. $ STARPU_NCUDA=2 ./application
  241. \endverbatim
  242. \section BenchmarkingStarPU Benchmarking StarPU
  243. Some interesting benchmarks are installed among examples in
  244. <c>$STARPU_PATH/lib/starpu/examples/</c>. Make sure to try various
  245. schedulers, for instance <c>STARPU_SCHED=dmda</c>.
  246. \subsection TaskSizeOverhead Task Size Overhead
  247. This benchmark gives a glimpse into how long a task should be (in µs) for StarPU overhead
  248. to be low enough to keep efficiency. Running
  249. <c>tasks_size_overhead.sh</c> generates a plot
  250. of the speedup of tasks of various sizes, depending on the number of CPUs being
  251. used.
  252. \image html tasks_size_overhead.png
  253. \image latex tasks_size_overhead.eps "" width=\textwidth
  254. \subsection DataTransferLatency Data Transfer Latency
  255. <c>local_pingpong</c> performs a ping-pong between the first two CUDA nodes, and
  256. prints the measured latency.
  257. \subsection MatrixMatrixMultiplication Matrix-Matrix Multiplication
  258. <c>sgemm</c> and <c>dgemm</c> perform a blocked matrix-matrix
  259. multiplication using BLAS and cuBLAS. They output the obtained GFlops.
  260. \subsection CholeskyFactorization Cholesky Factorization
  261. <c>cholesky_*</c> perform a Cholesky factorization (single precision). They use different dependency primitives.
  262. \subsection LUFactorization LU Factorization
  263. <c>lu_*</c> perform an LU factorization. They use different dependency primitives.
  264. \subsection SimulatedBenchmarks Simulated benchmarks
  265. It can also be convenient to try simulated benchmarks, if you want to give a try
  266. at CPU-GPU scheduling without actually having a GPU at hand. This can be done by
  267. using the simgrid version of StarPU: first install the simgrid simulator from
  268. http://simgrid.gforge.inria.fr/ (we tested with simgrid 3.11, 3.12 and 3.13, other versions
  269. may have compatibility issues), then configure StarPU with \ref enable-simgrid
  270. "--enable-simgrid" and rebuild and install it, and then you can simulate the performance for a
  271. few virtualized systems shipped along StarPU: attila, mirage, idgraf, and sirocco.
  272. For instance:
  273. \verbatim
  274. $ export STARPU_PERF_MODEL_DIR=$STARPU_PATH/share/starpu/perfmodels/sampling
  275. $ export STARPU_HOSTNAME=attila
  276. $ $STARPU_PATH/lib/starpu/examples/cholesky_implicit -size $((960*20)) -nblocks 20
  277. \endverbatim
  278. Will show the performance of the cholesky factorization with the attila
  279. system. It will be interesting to try with different matrix sizes and
  280. schedulers.
  281. Performance models are available for cholesky_*, lu_*, *gemm, with block sizes
  282. 320, 640, or 960 (plus 1440 for sirocco), and for stencil with block size 128x128x128, 192x192x192, and
  283. 256x256x256.
  284. */