13offline_performance_tools.doxy 21 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 CNRS
  5. * Copyright (C) 2011, 2012 INRIA
  6. * See the file version.doxy for copying conditions.
  7. */
  8. /*! \page OfflinePerformanceTools Offline Performance Tools
  9. To get an idea of what is happening, a lot of performance feedback is available,
  10. detailed in this chapter. The various informations should be checked for.
  11. <ul>
  12. <li>
  13. What does the Gantt diagram look like? (see \ref CreatingAGanttDiagram)
  14. <ul>
  15. <li> If it's mostly green (tasks running in the initial context) or context specific
  16. color prevailing, then the machine is properly
  17. utilized, and perhaps the codelets are just slow. Check their performance, see
  18. \ref PerformanceOfCodelets.
  19. </li>
  20. <li> If it's mostly purple (FetchingInput), tasks keep waiting for data
  21. transfers, do you perhaps have far more communication than computation? Did
  22. you properly use CUDA streams to make sure communication can be
  23. overlapped? Did you use data-locality aware schedulers to avoid transfers as
  24. much as possible?
  25. </li>
  26. <li> If it's mostly red (Blocked), tasks keep waiting for dependencies,
  27. do you have enough parallelism? It might be a good idea to check what the DAG
  28. looks like (see \ref CreatingADAGWithGraphviz).
  29. </li>
  30. <li> If only some workers are completely red (Blocked), for some reason the
  31. scheduler didn't assign tasks to them. Perhaps the performance model is bogus,
  32. check it (see \ref PerformanceOfCodelets). Do all your codelets have a
  33. performance model? When some of them don't, the schedulers switches to a
  34. greedy algorithm which thus performs badly.
  35. </li>
  36. </ul>
  37. </li>
  38. </ul>
  39. You can also use the Temanejo task debugger (see \ref UsingTheTemanejoTaskDebugger) to
  40. visualize the task graph more easily.
  41. \section Off-linePerformanceFeedback Off-line Performance Feedback
  42. \subsection GeneratingTracesWithFxT Generating Traces With FxT
  43. StarPU can use the FxT library (see
  44. https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/fkt/) to generate traces
  45. with a limited runtime overhead.
  46. You can either get a tarball:
  47. \verbatim
  48. $ wget http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/fkt/fxt-0.2.11.tar.gz
  49. \endverbatim
  50. or use the FxT library from CVS (autotools are required):
  51. \verbatim
  52. $ cvs -d :pserver:anonymous\@cvs.sv.gnu.org:/sources/fkt co FxT
  53. $ ./bootstrap
  54. \endverbatim
  55. Compiling and installing the FxT library in the <c>$FXTDIR</c> path is
  56. done following the standard procedure:
  57. \verbatim
  58. $ ./configure --prefix=$FXTDIR
  59. $ make
  60. $ make install
  61. \endverbatim
  62. In order to have StarPU to generate traces, StarPU should be configured with
  63. the option \ref with-fxt "--with-fxt" :
  64. \verbatim
  65. $ ./configure --with-fxt=$FXTDIR
  66. \endverbatim
  67. Or you can simply point the <c>PKG_CONFIG_PATH</c> to
  68. <c>$FXTDIR/lib/pkgconfig</c> and pass
  69. \ref with-fxt "--with-fxt" to <c>./configure</c>
  70. When FxT is enabled, a trace is generated when StarPU is terminated by calling
  71. starpu_shutdown(). The trace is a binary file whose name has the form
  72. <c>prof_file_XXX_YYY</c> where <c>XXX</c> is the user name, and
  73. <c>YYY</c> is the pid of the process that used StarPU. This file is saved in the
  74. <c>/tmp/</c> directory by default, or by the directory specified by
  75. the environment variable \ref STARPU_FXT_PREFIX.
  76. The additional configure option \ref enable-fxt-lock "--enable-fxt-lock" can
  77. be used to generate trace events which describes the locks behaviour during
  78. the execution.
  79. \subsection CreatingAGanttDiagram Creating a Gantt Diagram
  80. When the FxT trace file <c>filename</c> has been generated, it is possible to
  81. generate a trace in the Paje format by calling:
  82. \verbatim
  83. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename
  84. \endverbatim
  85. Or alternatively, setting the environment variable \ref STARPU_GENERATE_TRACE
  86. to <c>1</c> before application execution will make StarPU do it automatically at
  87. application shutdown.
  88. This will create a file <c>paje.trace</c> in the current directory that
  89. can be inspected with the ViTE (http://vite.gforge.inria.fr/) trace
  90. visualizing open-source tool. It is possible to open the
  91. file <c>paje.trace</c> with ViTE by using the following command:
  92. \verbatim
  93. $ vite paje.trace
  94. \endverbatim
  95. To get names of tasks instead of "unknown", fill the optional
  96. starpu_codelet::name, or use a performance model for them.
  97. Details of the codelet execution can be obtained by passing
  98. \ref enable-paje-codelet-details "--enable-paje-codelet-details" when
  99. configuring StarPU and using a recent enough version of ViTE (at least
  100. r1430).
  101. In the MPI execution case, collect the trace files from the MPI nodes, and
  102. specify them all on the command <c>starpu_fxt_tool</c>, for instance:
  103. \verbatim
  104. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename1 -i filename2
  105. \endverbatim
  106. By default, all tasks are displayed using a green color. To display tasks with
  107. varying colors, pass option <c>-c</c> to <c>starpu_fxt_tool</c>.
  108. To identify tasks precisely, the application can set the starpu_task::tag_id field of the
  109. task (or use STARPU_TAG_ONLY when using starpu_task_insert()), and with a recent
  110. enough version of vite (>= r1430) and the
  111. \ref enable-paje-codelet-details "--enable-paje-codelet-details"
  112. StarPU configure option, the value of the tag will show up in the trace.
  113. Traces can also be inspected by hand by using the tool <c>fxt_print</c>, for instance:
  114. \verbatim
  115. $ fxt_print -o -f filename
  116. \endverbatim
  117. Timings are in nanoseconds (while timings as seen in <c>vite</c> are in milliseconds).
  118. \subsection CreatingADAGWithGraphviz Creating a DAG With Graphviz
  119. When the FxT trace file <c>filename</c> has been generated, it is possible to
  120. generate a task graph in the DOT format by calling:
  121. \verbatim
  122. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename
  123. \endverbatim
  124. This will create a <c>dag.dot</c> file in the current directory. This file is a
  125. task graph described using the DOT language. It is possible to get a
  126. graphical output of the graph by using the graphviz library:
  127. \verbatim
  128. $ dot -Tpdf dag.dot -o output.pdf
  129. \endverbatim
  130. \subsection TraceTaskDetails Getting task details
  131. When the FxT trace file <c>filename</c> has been generated, details on the
  132. executed tasks can be retrieved by calling:
  133. \verbatim
  134. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename
  135. \endverbatim
  136. This will create a <c>tasks.rec</c> file in the current directory. This file
  137. is in the recutils format, i.e. <c>Field: value</c> lines, and empty lines to
  138. separate each task. This can be used as a convenient input for various ad-hoc
  139. analysis tools.
  140. \subsection MonitoringActivity Monitoring Activity
  141. When the FxT trace file <c>filename</c> has been generated, it is possible to
  142. generate an activity trace by calling:
  143. \verbatim
  144. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename
  145. \endverbatim
  146. This will create a file <c>activity.data</c> in the current
  147. directory. A profile of the application showing the activity of StarPU
  148. during the execution of the program can be generated:
  149. \verbatim
  150. $ starpu_workers_activity activity.data
  151. \endverbatim
  152. This will create a file named <c>activity.eps</c> in the current directory.
  153. This picture is composed of two parts.
  154. The first part shows the activity of the different workers. The green sections
  155. indicate which proportion of the time was spent executed kernels on the
  156. processing unit. The red sections indicate the proportion of time spent in
  157. StartPU: an important overhead may indicate that the granularity may be too
  158. low, and that bigger tasks may be appropriate to use the processing unit more
  159. efficiently. The black sections indicate that the processing unit was blocked
  160. because there was no task to process: this may indicate a lack of parallelism
  161. which may be alleviated by creating more tasks when it is possible.
  162. The second part of the picture <c>activity.eps</c> is a graph showing the
  163. evolution of the number of tasks available in the system during the execution.
  164. Ready tasks are shown in black, and tasks that are submitted but not
  165. schedulable yet are shown in grey.
  166. \section PerformanceOfCodelets Performance Of Codelets
  167. The performance model of codelets (see \ref PerformanceModelExample)
  168. can be examined by using the tool <c>starpu_perfmodel_display</c>:
  169. \verbatim
  170. $ starpu_perfmodel_display -l
  171. file: <malloc_pinned.hannibal>
  172. file: <starpu_slu_lu_model_21.hannibal>
  173. file: <starpu_slu_lu_model_11.hannibal>
  174. file: <starpu_slu_lu_model_22.hannibal>
  175. file: <starpu_slu_lu_model_12.hannibal>
  176. \endverbatim
  177. Here, the codelets of the example <c>lu</c> are available. We can examine the
  178. performance of the kernel <c>22</c> (in micro-seconds), which is history-based:
  179. \verbatim
  180. $ starpu_perfmodel_display -s starpu_slu_lu_model_22
  181. performance model for cpu
  182. # hash size mean dev n
  183. 57618ab0 19660800 2.851069e+05 1.829369e+04 109
  184. performance model for cuda_0
  185. # hash size mean dev n
  186. 57618ab0 19660800 1.164144e+04 1.556094e+01 315
  187. performance model for cuda_1
  188. # hash size mean dev n
  189. 57618ab0 19660800 1.164271e+04 1.330628e+01 360
  190. performance model for cuda_2
  191. # hash size mean dev n
  192. 57618ab0 19660800 1.166730e+04 3.390395e+02 456
  193. \endverbatim
  194. We can see that for the given size, over a sample of a few hundreds of
  195. execution, the GPUs are about 20 times faster than the CPUs (numbers are in
  196. us). The standard deviation is extremely low for the GPUs, and less than 10% for
  197. CPUs.
  198. This tool can also be used for regression-based performance models. It will then
  199. display the regression formula, and in the case of non-linear regression, the
  200. same performance log as for history-based performance models:
  201. \verbatim
  202. $ starpu_perfmodel_display -s non_linear_memset_regression_based
  203. performance model for cpu_impl_0
  204. Regression : #sample = 1400
  205. Linear: y = alpha size ^ beta
  206. alpha = 1.335973e-03
  207. beta = 8.024020e-01
  208. Non-Linear: y = a size ^b + c
  209. a = 5.429195e-04
  210. b = 8.654899e-01
  211. c = 9.009313e-01
  212. # hash size mean stddev n
  213. a3d3725e 4096 4.763200e+00 7.650928e-01 100
  214. 870a30aa 8192 1.827970e+00 2.037181e-01 100
  215. 48e988e9 16384 2.652800e+00 1.876459e-01 100
  216. 961e65d2 32768 4.255530e+00 3.518025e-01 100
  217. ...
  218. \endverbatim
  219. The same can also be achieved by using StarPU's library API, see
  220. \ref API_Performance_Model and notably the function
  221. starpu_perfmodel_load_symbol(). The source code of the tool
  222. <c>starpu_perfmodel_display</c> can be a useful example.
  223. The tool <c>starpu_perfmodel_plot</c> can be used to draw performance
  224. models. It writes a <c>.gp</c> file in the current directory, to be
  225. run with the tool <c>gnuplot</c>, which shows the corresponding curve.
  226. \image html starpu_non_linear_memset_regression_based.png
  227. \image latex starpu_non_linear_memset_regression_based.eps "" width=\textwidth
  228. When the field starpu_task::flops is set, <c>starpu_perfmodel_plot</c> can
  229. directly draw a GFlops curve, by simply adding the <c>-f</c> option:
  230. \verbatim
  231. $ starpu_perfmodel_plot -f -s chol_model_11
  232. \endverbatim
  233. This will however disable displaying the regression model, for which we can not
  234. compute GFlops.
  235. \image html starpu_chol_model_11_type.png
  236. \image latex starpu_chol_model_11_type.eps "" width=\textwidth
  237. When the FxT trace file <c>filename</c> has been generated, it is possible to
  238. get a profiling of each codelet by calling:
  239. \verbatim
  240. $ starpu_fxt_tool -i filename
  241. $ starpu_codelet_profile distrib.data codelet_name
  242. \endverbatim
  243. This will create profiling data files, and a <c>.gp</c> file in the current
  244. directory, which draws the distribution of codelet time over the application
  245. execution, according to data input size.
  246. \image html distrib_data.png
  247. \image latex distrib_data.eps "" width=\textwidth
  248. This is also available in the tool <c>starpu_perfmodel_plot</c>, by passing it
  249. the fxt trace:
  250. \verbatim
  251. $ starpu_perfmodel_plot -s non_linear_memset_regression_based -i /tmp/prof_file_foo_0
  252. \endverbatim
  253. It will produce a <c>.gp</c> file which contains both the performance model
  254. curves, and the profiling measurements.
  255. \image html starpu_non_linear_memset_regression_based_2.png
  256. \image latex starpu_non_linear_memset_regression_based_2.eps "" width=\textwidth
  257. If you have the statistical tool <c>R</c> installed, you can additionally use
  258. \verbatim
  259. $ starpu_codelet_histo_profile distrib.data
  260. \endverbatim
  261. Which will create one <c>.pdf</c> file per codelet and per input size, showing a
  262. histogram of the codelet execution time distribution.
  263. \image html distrib_data_histo.png
  264. \image latex distrib_data_histo.eps "" width=\textwidth
  265. \section TraceStatistics Trace statistics
  266. More than just codelet performance, it is interesting to get statistics over all
  267. kinds of StarPU states (allocations, data transfers, etc.). This is particularly
  268. useful to check what may have gone wrong in the accurracy of the simgrid
  269. simulation.
  270. This requires the <c>R</c> statistical tool, with the plyr, ggplot2 and
  271. data.table packages. If your system distribution does not have packages for
  272. these, one can fetch them from CRAN:
  273. \verbatim
  274. $ R
  275. > install.packages("plyr")
  276. > install.packages("ggplot2")
  277. > install.packages("data.table")
  278. > install.packages("knitr")
  279. \endverbatim
  280. The pj_dump tool from pajeng is also needed (see
  281. https://github.com/schnorr/pajeng)
  282. One can then get textual or .csv statistics over the trace states:
  283. \verbatim
  284. $ starpu_paje_state_stats -v native.trace simgrid.trace
  285. "Value" "Events_native.csv" "Duration_native.csv" "Events_simgrid.csv" "Duration_simgrid.csv"
  286. "Callback" 220 0.075978 220 0
  287. "chol_model_11" 10 565.176 10 572.8695
  288. "chol_model_21" 45 9184.828 45 9170.719
  289. "chol_model_22" 165 64712.07 165 64299.203
  290. $ starpu_paje_state_stats native.trace simgrid.trace
  291. \endverbatim
  292. And one can plot histograms of execution times, of several states for instance:
  293. \verbatim
  294. $ starpu_paje_draw_histogram -n chol_model_11,chol_model_21,chol_model_22 native.trace simgrid.trace
  295. \endverbatim
  296. and see the resulting pdf file:
  297. \image html paje_draw_histogram.png
  298. \image latex paje_draw_histogram.eps "" width=\textwidth
  299. A quick statistical report can be generated by using:
  300. \verbatim
  301. $ starpu_paje_summary native.trace simgrid.trace
  302. \endverbatim
  303. it includes gantt charts, execution summaries, as well as state duration charts
  304. and time distribution histograms.
  305. Other external Pajé analysis tools can be used on these traces, one just needs
  306. to sort the traces by timestamp order (which not guaranteed to make recording
  307. more efficient):
  308. \verbatim
  309. $ starpu_paje_sort paje.trace
  310. \endverbatim
  311. \section TheoreticalLowerBoundOnExecutionTime Theoretical Lower Bound On Execution Time
  312. StarPU can record a trace of what tasks are needed to complete the
  313. application, and then, by using a linear system, provide a theoretical lower
  314. bound of the execution time (i.e. with an ideal scheduling).
  315. The computed bound is not really correct when not taking into account
  316. dependencies, but for an application which have enough parallelism, it is very
  317. near to the bound computed with dependencies enabled (which takes a huge lot
  318. more time to compute), and thus provides a good-enough estimation of the ideal
  319. execution time.
  320. \ref TheoreticalLowerBoundOnExecutionTimeExample provides an example on how to
  321. use this.
  322. \section TheoreticalLowerBoundOnExecutionTimeExample Theoretical Lower Bound On Execution Time Example
  323. For kernels with history-based performance models (and provided that
  324. they are completely calibrated), StarPU can very easily provide a
  325. theoretical lower bound for the execution time of a whole set of
  326. tasks. See for instance <c>examples/lu/lu_example.c</c>: before
  327. submitting tasks, call the function starpu_bound_start(), and after
  328. complete execution, call starpu_bound_stop().
  329. starpu_bound_print_lp() or starpu_bound_print_mps() can then be used
  330. to output a Linear Programming problem corresponding to the schedule
  331. of your tasks. Run it through <c>lp_solve</c> or any other linear
  332. programming solver, and that will give you a lower bound for the total
  333. execution time of your tasks. If StarPU was compiled with the library
  334. <c>glpk</c> installed, starpu_bound_compute() can be used to solve it
  335. immediately and get the optimized minimum, in ms. Its parameter
  336. <c>integer</c> allows to decide whether integer resolution should be
  337. computed and returned
  338. The <c>deps</c> parameter tells StarPU whether to take tasks, implicit
  339. data, and tag dependencies into account. Tags released in a callback
  340. or similar are not taken into account, only tags associated with a task are.
  341. It must be understood that the linear programming
  342. problem size is quadratic with the number of tasks and thus the time to solve it
  343. will be very long, it could be minutes for just a few dozen tasks. You should
  344. probably use <c>lp_solve -timeout 1 test.pl -wmps test.mps</c> to convert the
  345. problem to MPS format and then use a better solver, <c>glpsol</c> might be
  346. better than <c>lp_solve</c> for instance (the <c>--pcost</c> option may be
  347. useful), but sometimes doesn't manage to converge. <c>cbc</c> might look
  348. slower, but it is parallel. For <c>lp_solve</c>, be sure to try at least all the
  349. <c>-B</c> options. For instance, we often just use <c>lp_solve -cc -B1 -Bb
  350. -Bg -Bp -Bf -Br -BG -Bd -Bs -BB -Bo -Bc -Bi</c> , and the <c>-gr</c> option can
  351. also be quite useful. The resulting schedule can be observed by using
  352. the tool <c>starpu_lp2paje</c>, which converts it into the Paje
  353. format.
  354. Data transfer time can only be taken into account when <c>deps</c> is set. Only
  355. data transfers inferred from implicit data dependencies between tasks are taken
  356. into account. Other data transfers are assumed to be completely overlapped.
  357. Setting <c>deps</c> to 0 will only take into account the actual computations
  358. on processing units. It however still properly takes into account the varying
  359. performances of kernels and processing units, which is quite more accurate than
  360. just comparing StarPU performances with the fastest of the kernels being used.
  361. The <c>prio</c> parameter tells StarPU whether to simulate taking into account
  362. the priorities as the StarPU scheduler would, i.e. schedule prioritized
  363. tasks before less prioritized tasks, to check to which extend this results
  364. to a less optimal solution. This increases even more computation time.
  365. \section MemoryFeedback Memory Feedback
  366. It is possible to enable memory statistics. To do so, you need to pass
  367. the option \ref enable-memory-stats "--enable-memory-stats" when running <c>configure</c>. It is then
  368. possible to call the function starpu_data_display_memory_stats() to
  369. display statistics about the current data handles registered within StarPU.
  370. Moreover, statistics will be displayed at the end of the execution on
  371. data handles which have not been cleared out. This can be disabled by
  372. setting the environment variable \ref STARPU_MEMORY_STATS to <c>0</c>.
  373. For example, if you do not unregister data at the end of the complex
  374. example, you will get something similar to:
  375. \verbatim
  376. $ STARPU_MEMORY_STATS=0 ./examples/interface/complex
  377. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  378. Complex[0] = 78.00 + 78.00 i
  379. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  380. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  381. \endverbatim
  382. \verbatim
  383. $ STARPU_MEMORY_STATS=1 ./examples/interface/complex
  384. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  385. Complex[0] = 78.00 + 78.00 i
  386. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  387. Complex[0] = 45.00 + 12.00 i
  388. #---------------------
  389. Memory stats:
  390. #-------
  391. Data on Node #3
  392. #-----
  393. Data : 0x553ff40
  394. Size : 16
  395. #--
  396. Data access stats
  397. /!\ Work Underway
  398. Node #0
  399. Direct access : 4
  400. Loaded (Owner) : 0
  401. Loaded (Shared) : 0
  402. Invalidated (was Owner) : 0
  403. Node #3
  404. Direct access : 0
  405. Loaded (Owner) : 0
  406. Loaded (Shared) : 1
  407. Invalidated (was Owner) : 0
  408. #-----
  409. Data : 0x5544710
  410. Size : 16
  411. #--
  412. Data access stats
  413. /!\ Work Underway
  414. Node #0
  415. Direct access : 2
  416. Loaded (Owner) : 0
  417. Loaded (Shared) : 1
  418. Invalidated (was Owner) : 1
  419. Node #3
  420. Direct access : 0
  421. Loaded (Owner) : 1
  422. Loaded (Shared) : 0
  423. Invalidated (was Owner) : 0
  424. \endverbatim
  425. \section DataStatistics Data Statistics
  426. Different data statistics can be displayed at the end of the execution
  427. of the application. To enable them, you need to pass the option
  428. \ref enable-stats "--enable-stats" when calling <c>configure</c>. When calling
  429. starpu_shutdown() various statistics will be displayed,
  430. execution, MSI cache statistics, allocation cache statistics, and data
  431. transfer statistics. The display can be disabled by setting the
  432. environment variable \ref STARPU_STATS to <c>0</c>.
  433. \verbatim
  434. $ ./examples/cholesky/cholesky_tag
  435. Computation took (in ms)
  436. 518.16
  437. Synthetic GFlops : 44.21
  438. #---------------------
  439. MSI cache stats :
  440. TOTAL MSI stats hit 1622 (66.23 %) miss 827 (33.77 %)
  441. ...
  442. \endverbatim
  443. \verbatim
  444. $ STARPU_STATS=0 ./examples/cholesky/cholesky_tag
  445. Computation took (in ms)
  446. 518.16
  447. Synthetic GFlops : 44.21
  448. \endverbatim
  449. // TODO: data transfer stats are similar to the ones displayed when
  450. // setting STARPU_BUS_STATS
  451. */