470_simgrid.doxy 9.1 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * This file is part of the StarPU Handbook.
  3. * Copyright (C) 2009--2011 Universit@'e de Bordeaux
  4. * Copyright (C) 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016 CNRS
  5. * Copyright (C) 2011, 2012, 2016 INRIA
  6. * See the file version.doxy for copying conditions.
  7. */
  8. /*! \page SimGridSupport SimGrid Support
  9. StarPU can use Simgrid in order to simulate execution on an arbitrary
  10. platform. This was tested with simgrid 3.11, 3.12 and 3.13, other versions may have
  11. compatibility issues.
  12. \section Preparing Preparing Your Application For Simulation
  13. There are a few technical details which need to be handled for an application to
  14. be simulated through Simgrid.
  15. If the application uses <c>gettimeofday</c> to make its
  16. performance measurements, the real time will be used, which will be bogus. To
  17. get the simulated time, it has to use starpu_timing_now() which returns the
  18. virtual timestamp in us.
  19. For some technical reason, the application's .c file which contains main() has
  20. to be recompiled with starpu_simgrid_wrap.h, which in the simgrid case will # define main()
  21. into starpu_main(), and it is libstarpu which will provide the real main() and
  22. will call the application's main().
  23. To be able to test with crazy data sizes, one may want to only allocate
  24. application data if STARPU_SIMGRID is not defined. Passing a <c>NULL</c> pointer to
  25. starpu_data_register functions is fine, data will never be read/written to by
  26. StarPU in Simgrid mode anyway.
  27. To be able to run the application with e.g. CUDA simulation on a system which
  28. does not have CUDA installed, one can fill the cuda_funcs with (void*)1, to
  29. express that there is a CUDA implementation, even if one does not actually
  30. provide it. StarPU will not actually run it in Simgrid mode anyway by default
  31. (unless the ::STARPU_CODELET_SIMGRID_EXECUTE flag is set in the codelet)
  32. \section Calibration Calibration
  33. The idea is to first compile StarPU normally, and run the application,
  34. so as to automatically benchmark the bus and the codelets.
  35. \verbatim
  36. $ ./configure && make
  37. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  38. [starpu][_starpu_load_history_based_model] Warning: model matvecmult
  39. is not calibrated, forcing calibration for this run. Use the
  40. STARPU_CALIBRATE environment variable to control this.
  41. $ ...
  42. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  43. TEST PASSED
  44. \endverbatim
  45. Note that we force to use the scheduler <c>dmda</c> to generate
  46. performance models for the application. The application may need to be
  47. run several times before the model is calibrated.
  48. \section Simulation Simulation
  49. Then, recompile StarPU, passing \ref enable-simgrid "--enable-simgrid"
  50. to <c>./configure</c>. Make sure to keep all other <c>./configure</c> options
  51. the same, and notably options such as <c>--enable-maxcudadev</c>.
  52. \verbatim
  53. $ ./configure --enable-simgrid
  54. \endverbatim
  55. To specify the location of SimGrid, you can either set the environment
  56. variables SIMGRID_CFLAGS and SIMGRID_LIBS, or use the configure
  57. options \ref with-simgrid-dir "--with-simgrid-dir",
  58. \ref with-simgrid-include-dir "--with-simgrid-include-dir" and
  59. \ref with-simgrid-lib-dir "--with-simgrid-lib-dir", for example
  60. \verbatim
  61. $ ./configure --with-simgrid-dir=/opt/local/simgrid
  62. \endverbatim
  63. You can then re-run the application.
  64. \verbatim
  65. $ make
  66. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  67. TEST FAILED !!!
  68. \endverbatim
  69. It is normal that the test fails: since the computation are not actually done
  70. (that is the whole point of simgrid), the result is wrong, of course.
  71. If the performance model is not calibrated enough, the following error
  72. message will be displayed
  73. \verbatim
  74. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda ./examples/matvecmult/matvecmult
  75. [starpu][_starpu_load_history_based_model] Warning: model matvecmult
  76. is not calibrated, forcing calibration for this run. Use the
  77. STARPU_CALIBRATE environment variable to control this.
  78. [starpu][_starpu_simgrid_execute_job][assert failure] Codelet
  79. matvecmult does not have a perfmodel, or is not calibrated enough
  80. \endverbatim
  81. The number of devices can be chosen as usual with \ref STARPU_NCPU,
  82. \ref STARPU_NCUDA, and \ref STARPU_NOPENCL, and the amount of GPU memory
  83. with \ref STARPU_LIMIT_CUDA_MEM, \ref STARPU_LIMIT_CUDA_devid_MEM,
  84. \ref STARPU_LIMIT_OPENCL_MEM, and \ref STARPU_LIMIT_OPENCL_devid_MEM.
  85. \section SimulationOnAnotherMachine Simulation On Another Machine
  86. The simgrid support even permits to perform simulations on another machine, your
  87. desktop, typically. To achieve this, one still needs to perform the Calibration
  88. step on the actual machine to be simulated, then copy them to your desktop
  89. machine (the <c>$STARPU_HOME/.starpu</c> directory). One can then perform the
  90. Simulation step on the desktop machine, by setting the environment
  91. variable \ref STARPU_HOSTNAME to the name of the actual machine, to
  92. make StarPU use the performance models of the simulated machine even
  93. on the desktop machine.
  94. If the desktop machine does not have CUDA or OpenCL, StarPU is still able to
  95. use simgrid to simulate execution with CUDA/OpenCL devices, but the application
  96. source code will probably disable the CUDA and OpenCL codelets in thatcd sc
  97. case. Since during simgrid execution, the functions of the codelet are actually
  98. not called by default, one can use dummy functions such as the following to
  99. still permit CUDA or OpenCL execution.
  100. \section SimulationExamples Simulation Examples
  101. StarPU ships a few performance models for a couple of systems: attila,
  102. mirage, idgraf, and sirocco. See section \ref SimulatedBenchmarks for the details.
  103. \section FakeSimulations Simulations On Fake Machines
  104. It is possible to build fake machines which do not exist, by modifying the
  105. platform file in <c>$STARPU_HOME/.starpu/sampling/bus/machine.platform.xml</c>
  106. by hand: one can add more CPUs, add GPUs (but the performance model file has to
  107. be extended as well), change the available GPU memory size, PCI memory bandwidth, etc.
  108. \section TweakingSimulation Tweaking Simulation
  109. The simulation can be tweaked, to be able to tune it between a very accurate
  110. simulation and a very simple simulation (which is thus close to scheduling
  111. theory results), see the \ref STARPU_SIMGRID_CUDA_MALLOC_COST,
  112. \ref STARPU_SIMGRID_CUDA_QUEUE_COST and \ref STARPU_SIMGRID_TASK_SUBMIT_COST
  113. environment variables.
  114. \section SimulationMPIApplications MPI Applications
  115. StarPU-MPI applications can also be run in simgrid mode. It needs to be compiled
  116. with smpicc, and run using the <c>starpu_smpirun</c> script, for instance:
  117. \verbatim
  118. $ STARPU_SCHED=dmda starpu_smpirun -platform cluster.xml -hostfile hostfile ./mpi/tests/pingpong
  119. \endverbatim
  120. Where cluster.xml is a Simgrid-MPI platform description, and hostfile the
  121. list of MPI nodes to be used. StarPU currently only supports homogeneous MPI
  122. clusters: for each MPI node it will just replicate the architecture referred by
  123. \ref STARPU_HOSTNAME.
  124. \section SimulationDebuggingApplications Debugging Applications
  125. By default, simgrid uses its own implementation of threads, which prevents gdb
  126. from being able to inspect stacks of all threads. To be able to fully debug an
  127. application running with simgrid, pass the <c>--cfg=contexts/factory:thread</c>
  128. option to the application, to make simgrid use system threads, which gdb will be
  129. able to manipulate as usual.
  130. \snippet simgrid.c To be included. You should update doxygen if you see this text.
  131. \section SimulationMemoryUsage Memory Usage
  132. Since kernels are not actually run and data transfers are not actually
  133. performed, the data memory does not actually need to be allocated. This allows
  134. for instance to simulate the execution of applications processing very big data
  135. on a small laptop.
  136. The application can for instance pass <c>1</c> (or whatever bogus pointer)
  137. to starpu data registration functions, instead of allocating data. This will
  138. however require the application to take care of not trying to access the data,
  139. and will not work in MPI mode, which performs transfers.
  140. Another way is to pass the \ref STARPU_MALLOC_SIMULATION_FOLDED flag to the
  141. starpu_malloc_flags() function. This will make it allocate a memory area which
  142. one can read/write, but optimized so that this does not actually consume
  143. memory. Of course, the values read from such area will be bogus, but this allows
  144. the application to keep e.g. data load, store, initialization as it is, and also
  145. work in MPI mode.
  146. Note however that notably Linux kernels refuse obvious memory overcommitting by
  147. default, so a single allocation can typically not be bigger than the amount of
  148. physical memory, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/vm/overcommit-accounting
  149. This prevents for instance from allocating a single huge matrix. Allocating a
  150. huge matrix in several tiles is not a problem, however. <c>sysctl
  151. vm.overcommit_memory=1</c> can also be used to allow such overcommit.
  152. Note however that this folding is done by remapping the same file several times,
  153. and Linux kernels will also refuse to create too many memory areas. <c>sysctl
  154. vm.max_map_count</c> can be used to check and change the default (65535). By
  155. default, StarPU uses a 1MiB file, so it hopefully fits in the CPU cache. This
  156. however limits the amount of such folded memory to a bit below 64GiB. The
  157. \ref STARPU_MALLOC_SIMULATION_FOLD environment variable can be used to increase the
  158. size of the file.
  159. */