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351 \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
352 \usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
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354 \usepackage{algpseudocode}
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361 \algnewcommand\Input{\item[\algorithmicinput]}
363 \algnewcommand\algorithmicoutput{\textbf{Output:}}
364 \algnewcommand\Output{\item[\algorithmicoutput]}
366 \newtheorem{proposition}{Proposition}
371 % can use linebreaks \\ within to get better formatting as desired
372 \title{TSIRM: A Two-Stage Iteration with least-squares Residual Minimization algorithm to solve large sparse linear systems}
379 % author names and affiliations
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383 \author{\IEEEauthorblockN{Rapha\"el Couturier\IEEEauthorrefmark{1}, Lilia Ziane Khodja\IEEEauthorrefmark{2}, and Christophe Guyeux\IEEEauthorrefmark{1}}
384 \IEEEauthorblockA{\IEEEauthorrefmark{1} Femto-ST Institute, University of Franche-Comt\'e, France\\
385 Email: \{raphael.couturier,christophe.guyeux\}@univ-fcomte.fr}
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387 Email: lilia.ziane@inria.fr}
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417 % use for special paper notices
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423 % make the title area
428 In this article, a two-stage iterative algorithm is proposed to improve the
429 convergence of Krylov based iterative methods, typically those of GMRES
430 variants. The principle of the proposed approach is to build an external
431 iteration over the Krylov method, and to frequently store its current residual
432 (at each GMRES restart for instance). After a given number of outer iterations,
433 a least-squares minimization step is applied on the matrix composed by the saved
434 residuals, in order to compute a better solution and to make new iterations if
435 required. It is proven that the proposal has the same convergence properties
436 than the inner embedded method itself. Experiments using up to 16,394 cores
437 also show that the proposed algorithm runs around 5 or 7 times faster than
442 Iterative Krylov methods; sparse linear systems; two stage iteration; least-squares residual minimization; PETSc
446 % For peer review papers, you can put extra information on the cover
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538 % footnotes above bottom floats. This can be corrected via the \fnbelowfloat
539 % command of the stfloats package.
543 %%%*********************************************************
544 %%%*********************************************************
545 \section{Introduction}
547 % You must have at least 2 lines in the paragraph with the drop letter
548 % (should never be an issue)
550 Iterative methods have recently become more attractive than direct ones to solve
551 very large sparse linear systems\cite{Saad2003}. They are more efficient in a
552 parallel context, supporting thousands of cores, and they require less memory
553 and arithmetic operations than direct methods~\cite{bahicontascoutu}. This is
554 why new iterative methods are frequently proposed or adapted by researchers, and
555 the increasing need to solve very large sparse linear systems has triggered the
556 development of such efficient iterative techniques suitable for parallel
559 Most of the successful iterative methods currently available are based on
560 so-called ``Krylov subspaces''. They consist in forming a basis of successive
561 matrix powers multiplied by an initial vector, which can be for instance the
562 residual. These methods use vectors orthogonality of the Krylov subspace basis
563 in order to solve linear systems. The most known iterative Krylov subspace
564 methods are conjugate gradient and GMRES ones (Generalized Minimal RESidual).
567 However, iterative methods suffer from scalability problems on parallel
568 computing platforms with many processors, due to their need of reduction
569 operations, and to collective communications to achieve matrix-vector
570 multiplications. The communications on large clusters with thousands of cores
571 and large sizes of messages can significantly affect the performances of these
572 iterative methods. As a consequence, Krylov subspace iteration methods are often
573 used with preconditioners in practice, to increase their convergence and
574 accelerate their performances. However, most of the good preconditioners are
575 not scalable on large clusters.
577 In this research work, a two-stage algorithm based on two nested iterations
578 called inner-outer iterations is proposed. This algorithm consists in solving
579 the sparse linear system iteratively with a small number of inner iterations,
580 and restarting the outer step with a new solution minimizing some error
581 functions over some previous residuals. For further information on two-stage
582 iteration methods, interested readers are invited to
583 consult~\cite{Nichols:1973:CTS}. Two-stage algorithms are easy to parallelize on
584 large clusters. Furthermore, the least-squares minimization technique improves
585 its convergence and performances.
587 The present article is organized as follows. Related works are presented in
588 Section~\ref{sec:02}. Section~\ref{sec:03} details the two-stage algorithm using
589 a least-squares residual minimization, while Section~\ref{sec:04} provides
590 convergence results regarding this method. Section~\ref{sec:05} shows some
591 experimental results obtained on large clusters using routines of PETSc
592 toolkit. This research work ends by a conclusion section, in which the proposal
593 is summarized while intended perspectives are provided.
595 %%%*********************************************************
596 %%%*********************************************************
600 %%%*********************************************************
601 %%%*********************************************************
602 \section{Related works}
604 Krylov subspace iteration methods have increasingly become key
605 techniques for solving linear and nonlinear systems, or eigenvalue problems,
606 especially since the increasing development of
607 preconditioners~\cite{Saad2003,Meijerink77}. One reason of the popularity of
608 these methods is their generality, simplicity, and efficiency to solve systems of
609 equations arising from very large and complex problems.
611 GMRES is one of the most widely used Krylov iterative method for solving sparse
612 and large linear systems. It has been developed by Saad \emph{et al.}~\cite{Saad86} as a
613 generalized method to deal with unsymmetric and non-Hermitian problems, and
614 indefinite symmetric problems too. In its original version called full GMRES, this algorithm
615 minimizes the residual over the current Krylov subspace until convergence in at
616 most $n$ iterations, where $n$ is the size of the sparse matrix.
617 Full GMRES is however too much expensive in the case of large matrices, since the
618 required orthogonalization process per iteration grows quadratically with the
619 number of iterations. For that reason, GMRES is restarted in practice after each
620 $m\ll n$ iterations, to avoid the storage of a large orthonormal basis. However,
621 the convergence behavior of the restarted GMRES, called GMRES($m$), in many
622 cases depends quite critically on the $m$ value~\cite{Huang89}. Therefore in
623 most cases, a preconditioning technique is applied to the restarted GMRES method
624 in order to improve its convergence.
626 To enhance the robustness of Krylov iterative solvers, some techniques have been proposed allowing the use of different preconditioners, if necessary, within the iteration instead of restarting. Those techniques may lead to considerable savings in CPU time and memory requirements. Van der Vorst in~\cite{Vorst94} has for instance proposed variants of the GMRES algorithm in which a different preconditioner is applied in each iteration, leading to the so-called GMRESR family of nested methods. In fact, the GMRES method is effectively preconditioned with other iterative schemes (or GMRES itself), where the iterations of the GMRES method are called outer iterations while the iterations of the preconditioning process is referred to as inner iterations. Saad in~\cite{Saad:1993} has proposed FGMRES which is another variant of the GMRES algorithm using a variable preconditioner. In FGMRES the search directions are preconditioned whereas in GMRESR the residuals are preconditioned. However, in practice, good preconditioners are those based on direct methods, as ILU preconditioners, which are not easy to parallelize and suffer from the scalability problems on large clusters of thousands of cores.
628 Recently, communication-avoiding methods have been developed to reduce the communication overheads in Krylov subspace iterative solvers. On modern computer architectures, communications between processors are much slower than floating-point arithmetic operations on a given processor. Communication-avoiding techniques reduce either communications between processors or data movements between levels of the memory hierarchy, by reformulating the communication-bound kernels (more frequently SpMV kernels) and the orthogonalization operations within the Krylov iterative solver. Different works have studied the communication-avoiding techniques for the GMRES method, so-called CA-GMRES, on multicore processors and multi-GPU machines~\cite{Mohiyuddin2009,Hoemmen2010,Yamazaki2014}.
630 Compared to all these works and to all the other works on Krylov iterative
631 method, the originality of our work is to build a second iteration over a Krylov
632 iterative method and to minimize the residuals with a least-squares method after
633 a given number of outer iterations.
635 %%%*********************************************************
636 %%%*********************************************************
640 %%%*********************************************************
641 %%%*********************************************************
642 \section{TSIRM: Two-stage iteration with least-squares residuals minimization algorithm}
644 A two-stage algorithm is proposed to solve large sparse linear systems of the
645 form $Ax=b$, where $A\in\mathbb{R}^{n\times n}$ is a sparse and square
646 nonsingular matrix, $x\in\mathbb{R}^n$ is the solution vector, and
647 $b\in\mathbb{R}^n$ is the right-hand side. As explained previously,
648 the algorithm is implemented as an
649 inner-outer iteration solver based on iterative Krylov methods. The main
650 key-points of the proposed solver are given in Algorithm~\ref{algo:01}.
651 It can be summarized as follows: the
652 inner solver is a Krylov based one. In order to accelerate its convergence, the
653 outer solver periodically applies a least-squares minimization on the residuals computed by the inner one. %Tsolver which does not required to be changed.
655 At each outer iteration, the sparse linear system $Ax=b$ is partially solved
656 using only $m$ iterations of an iterative method, this latter being initialized
657 with the last obtained approximation. GMRES method~\cite{Saad86}, or any of its
658 variants, can potentially be used as inner solver. The current approximation of
659 the Krylov method is then stored inside a $n \times s$ matrix $S$, which is
660 composed by the $s$ last solutions that have been computed during the inner
661 iterations phase. In the remainder, the $i$-th column vector of $S$ will be
664 At each $s$ iterations, another kind of minimization step is applied in order to
665 compute a new solution $x$. For that, the previous residuals of $Ax=b$ are computed by
666 the inner iterations with $(b-AS)$. The minimization of the residuals is obtained by
668 \underset{\alpha\in\mathbb{R}^{s}}{min}\|b-R\alpha\|_2
671 with $R=AS$. The new solution $x$ is then computed with $x=S\alpha$.
674 In practice, $R$ is a dense rectangular matrix belonging in $\mathbb{R}^{n\times s}$,
675 with $s\ll n$. In order to minimize~\eqref{eq:01}, a least-squares method such as
676 CGLS ~\cite{Hestenes52} or LSQR~\cite{Paige82} is used. Remark that these methods are more
677 appropriate than a single direct method in a parallel context.
683 \begin{algorithmic}[1]
684 \Input $A$ (sparse matrix), $b$ (right-hand side)
685 \Output $x$ (solution vector)\vspace{0.2cm}
686 \State Set the initial guess $x_0$
687 \For {$k=1,2,3,\ldots$ until convergence ($error<\epsilon_{tsirm}$)} \label{algo:conv}
688 \State $[x_k,error]=Solve(A,b,x_{k-1},max\_iter_{kryl})$ \label{algo:solve}
689 \State $S_{k \mod s}=x_k$ \label{algo:store} \Comment{update column ($k \mod s$) of $S$}
690 \If {$k \mod s=0$ {\bf and} $error>\epsilon_{kryl}$}
691 \State $R=AS$ \Comment{compute dense matrix} \label{algo:matrix_mul}
692 \State $\alpha=Least\_Squares(R,b,max\_iter_{ls})$ \label{algo:}
693 \State $x_k=S\alpha$ \Comment{compute new solution}
700 Algorithm~\ref{algo:01} summarizes the principle of the proposed method. The
701 outer iteration is inside the \emph{for} loop. Line~\ref{algo:solve}, the Krylov
702 method is called for a maximum of $max\_iter_{kryl}$ iterations. In practice,
703 we suggest to set this parameter equal to the restart number in the GMRES-like
704 method. Moreover, a tolerance threshold must be specified for the solver. In
705 practice, this threshold must be much smaller than the convergence threshold of
706 the TSIRM algorithm (\emph{i.e.}, $\epsilon_{tsirm}$). We also consider that
707 after the call of the $Solve$ function, we obtain the vector $x_k$ and the
708 $error$, which is defined by $||Ax_k-b||_2$.
710 Line~\ref{algo:store}, $S_{k \mod s}=x_k$ consists in copying the solution
711 $x_k$ into the column $k \mod s$ of $S$. After the minimization, the matrix
712 $S$ is reused with the new values of the residuals. To solve the minimization
713 problem, an iterative method is used. Two parameters are required for that:
714 the maximum number of iterations ($max\_iter_{ls}$) and the threshold to stop
715 the method ($\epsilon_{ls}$).
717 Let us summarize the most important parameters of TSIRM:
719 \item $\epsilon_{tsirm}$: the threshold to stop the TSIRM method;
720 \item $max\_iter_{kryl}$: the maximum number of iterations for the Krylov method;
721 \item $s$: the number of outer iterations before applying the minimization step;
722 \item $max\_iter_{ls}$: the maximum number of iterations for the iterative least-squares method;
723 \item $\epsilon_{ls}$: the threshold used to stop the least-squares method.
727 The parallelization of TSIRM relies on the parallelization of all its
728 parts. More precisely, except the least-squares step, all the other parts are
729 obvious to achieve out in parallel. In order to develop a parallel version of
730 our code, we have chosen to use PETSc~\cite{petsc-web-page}. For
731 line~\ref{algo:matrix_mul} the matrix-matrix multiplication is implemented and
732 efficient since the matrix $A$ is sparse and since the matrix $S$ contains few
733 columns in practice. As explained previously, at least two methods seem to be
734 interesting to solve the least-squares minimization, CGLS and LSQR.
736 In Algorithm~\ref{algo:02} we remind the CGLS algorithm. The LSQR method follows
737 more or less the same principle but it takes more place, so we briefly explain
738 the parallelization of CGLS which is similar to LSQR.
742 \begin{algorithmic}[1]
743 \Input $A$ (matrix), $b$ (right-hand side)
744 \Output $x$ (solution vector)\vspace{0.2cm}
745 \State Let $x_0$ be an initial approximation
749 \State $\gamma=||s_0||^2_2$
750 \For {$k=1,2,3,\ldots$ until convergence ($\gamma<\epsilon_{ls}$)} \label{algo2:conv}
752 \State $\alpha_k=\gamma/||q_k||^2_2$
753 \State $x_k=x_{k-1}+\alpha_kp_k$
754 \State $r_k=r_{k-1}-\alpha_kq_k$
756 \State $\gamma_{old}=\gamma$
757 \State $\gamma=||s_k||^2_2$
758 \State $\beta_k=\gamma/\gamma_{old}$
759 \State $p_{k+1}=s_k+\beta_kp_k$
766 In each iteration of CGLS, there is two matrix-vector multiplications and some
767 classical operations: dot product, norm, multiplication and addition on
768 vectors. All these operations are easy to implement in PETSc or similar
769 environment. It should be noticed that LSQR follows the same principle, it is a
770 little bit longer but it performs more or less the same operations.
773 %%%*********************************************************
774 %%%*********************************************************
776 \section{Convergence results}
780 We can now claim that,
783 If $A$ is either a definite positive or a positive matrix and GMRES($m$) is used as solver, then the TSIRM algorithm is convergent.
785 Furthermore, let $r_k$ be the
786 $k$-th residue of TSIRM, then
787 we have the following boundaries:
789 \item when $A$ is positive:
791 ||r_k|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{km}{2}} ||r_0|| ,
793 where $M$ is the symmetric part of $A$, $\alpha = \lambda_{min}(M)^2$ and $\beta = \lambda_{max}(A^T A)$;
794 \item when $A$ is positive definite:
796 \|r_k\| \leq \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_0\|.
799 %In the general case, where A is not positive definite, we have
800 %$\|r_n\| \le \inf_{p \in P_n} \|p(A)\| \le \kappa_2(V) \inf_{p \in P_n} \max_{\lambda \in \sigma(A)} |p(\lambda)| \|r_0\|, .$
804 Let us first recall that the residue is under control when considering the GMRES algorithm on a positive definite matrix, and it is bounded as follows:
806 \|r_k\| \leq \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{k/2} \|r_0\| .
808 Additionally, when $A$ is a positive real matrix with symmetric part $M$, then the residual norm provided at the $m$-th step of GMRES satisfies:
810 ||r_m|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{m}{2}} ||r_0|| ,
812 where $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are defined as in Proposition~\ref{prop:saad}, which proves
813 the convergence of GMRES($m$) for all $m$ under such assumptions regarding $A$.
814 These well-known results can be found, \emph{e.g.}, in~\cite{Saad86}.
816 We will now prove by a mathematical induction that, for each $k \in \mathbb{N}^\ast$,
817 $||r_k|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{mk}{2}} ||r_0||$ when $A$ is positive, and $\|r_k\| \leq \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_0\|$ when $A$ is positive definite.
819 The base case is obvious, as for $k=1$, the TSIRM algorithm simply consists in applying GMRES($m$) once, leading to a new residual $r_1$ that follows the inductive hypothesis due, to the results recalled above.
821 Suppose now that the claim holds for all $m=1, 2, \hdots, k-1$, that is, $\forall m \in \{1,2,\hdots, k-1\}$, $||r_m|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{km}{2}} ||r_0||$ in the positive case, and $\|r_k\| \leq \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_0\|$ in the definite positive one.
822 We will show that the statement holds too for $r_k$. Two situations can occur:
824 \item If $k \not\equiv 0 ~(\textrm{mod}\ m)$, then the TSIRM algorithm consists in executing GMRES once. In that case and by using the inductive hypothesis, we obtain either $||r_k|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{m}{2}} ||r_{k-1}||\leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{km}{2}} ||r_0||$ if $A$ is positive, or $\|r_k\| \leqslant \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{m/2} \|r_{k-1}\|$ $\leqslant$ $\left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_{0}\|$ in the positive definite case.
825 \item Else, the TSIRM algorithm consists in two stages: a first GMRES($m$) execution leads to a temporary $x_k$ whose residue satisfies:
827 \item $||r_k|| \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{m}{2}} ||r_{k-1}||\leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{km}{2}} ||r_0||$ in the positive case,
828 \item $\|r_k\| \leqslant \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{m/2} \|r_{k-1}\|$ $\leqslant$ $\left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_{0}\|$ in the positive definite one,
830 and a least squares resolution.
831 Let $\operatorname{span}(S) = \left \{ {\sum_{i=1}^k \lambda_i v_i \Big| k \in \mathbb{N}, v_i \in S, \lambda _i \in \mathbb{R}} \right \}$ be the linear span of a set of real vectors $S$. So,\\
832 $\min_{\alpha \in \mathbb{R}^s} ||b-R\alpha ||_2 = \min_{\alpha \in \mathbb{R}^s} ||b-AS\alpha ||_2$
835 & = \min_{x \in span\left(S_{k-s+1}, S_{k-s+2}, \hdots, S_{k} \right)} ||b-AS\alpha ||_2\\
836 & = \min_{x \in span\left(x_{k-s+1}, x_{k-s}+2, \hdots, x_{k} \right)} ||b-AS\alpha ||_2\\
837 & \leqslant \min_{x \in span\left( x_{k} \right)} ||b-Ax ||_2\\
838 & \leqslant \min_{\lambda \in \mathbb{R}} ||b-\lambda Ax_{k} ||_2\\
839 & \leqslant ||b-Ax_{k}||_2\\
841 & \leqslant \left(1-\dfrac{\alpha}{\beta}\right)^{\frac{km}{2}} ||r_0||, \textrm{ if $A$ is positive,}\\
842 & \leqslant \left( 1-\frac{\lambda_{\mathrm{min}}^2(1/2(A^T + A))}{ \lambda_{\mathrm{max}}(A^T A)} \right)^{km/2} \|r_{0}\|, \textrm{ if $A$ is}\\
843 & \textrm{positive definite,}
846 which concludes the induction and the proof.
849 %We can remark that, at each iterate, the residue of the TSIRM algorithm is lower
850 %than the one of the GMRES method.
852 %%%*********************************************************
853 %%%*********************************************************
854 \section{Experiments using PETSc}
858 In order to see the behavior of our approach when considering only one processor,
859 a first comparison with GMRES or FGMRES and the new algorithm detailed
860 previously has been experimented. Matrices that have been used with their
861 characteristics (names, fields, rows, and nonzero coefficients) are detailed in
862 Table~\ref{tab:01}. These latter, which are real-world applications matrices,
863 have been extracted from the Davis collection, University of
864 Florida~\cite{Dav97}.
868 \begin{tabular}{|c|c|r|r|r|}
870 Matrix name & Field &\# Rows & \# Nonzeros \\\hline \hline
871 crashbasis & Optimization & 160,000 & 1,750,416 \\
872 parabolic\_fem & Comput. fluid dynamics & 525,825 & 2,100,225 \\
873 epb3 & Thermal problem & 84,617 & 463,625 \\
874 atmosmodj & Comput. fluid dynamics & 1,270,432 & 8,814,880 \\
875 bfwa398 & Electromagnetics pb & 398 & 3,678 \\
876 torso3 & 2D/3D problem & 259,156 & 4,429,042 \\
880 \caption{Main characteristics of the sparse matrices chosen from the Davis collection}
884 Chosen parameters are detailed below. As by default the restart of GMRES is
885 performed every 30 iterations, we have chosen to stop the GMRES every 30
886 iterations (\emph{i.e.} $max\_iter_{kryl}=30$). $s$ is set to 8. CGLS is chosen
887 to minimize the least-squares problem with the following parameters:
888 $\epsilon_{ls}=1e-40$ and $max\_iter_{ls}=20$. The external precision is set to
889 $\epsilon_{tsirm}=1e-10$. Those experiments have been performed on a Intel(R)
890 Core(TM) i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz with the version 3.5.1 of PETSc.
893 In Table~\ref{tab:02}, some experiments comparing the solving of the linear
894 systems obtained with the previous matrices with a GMRES variant and with TSIRM
895 are given. In the second column, it can be noticed that either GMRES or FGMRES
896 (Flexible GMRES)~\cite{Saad:1993} is used to solve the linear system. According
897 to the matrices, different preconditioners are used. With TSIRM, the same
898 solver and the same preconditionner are used. This Table shows that TSIRM can
899 drastically reduce the number of iterations to reach the convergence when the
900 number of iterations for the normal GMRES is more or less greater than 500. In
901 fact this also depends on two parameters: the number of iterations to stop GMRES
902 and the number of iterations to perform the minimization.
907 \begin{tabular}{|c|c|r|r|r|r|}
910 \multirow{2}{*}{Matrix name} & Solver / & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{GMRES} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM CGLS} \\
912 & precond & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. \\\hline \hline
914 crashbasis & gmres / none & 15.65 & 518 & 14.12 & 450 \\
915 parabolic\_fem & gmres / ilu & 1009.94 & 7573 & 401.52 & 2970 \\
916 epb3 & fgmres / sor & 8.67 & 600 & 8.21 & 540 \\
917 atmosmodj & fgmres / sor & 104.23 & 451 & 88.97 & 366 \\
918 bfwa398 & gmres / none & 1.42 & 9612 & 0.28 & 1650 \\
919 torso3 & fgmres / sor & 37.70 & 565 & 34.97 & 510 \\
923 \caption{Comparison of (F)GMRES and TSIRM with (F)GMRES in sequential with some matrices, time is expressed in seconds.}
932 In order to perform larger experiments, we have tested some example applications
933 of PETSc. Those applications are available in the \emph{ksp} part which is
934 suited for scalable linear equations solvers:
936 \item ex15 is an example which solves in parallel an operator using a finite
937 difference scheme. The diagonal is equal to 4 and 4 extra-diagonals
938 representing the neighbors in each directions are equal to -1. This example is
939 used in many physical phenomena, for example, heat and fluid flow, wave
941 \item ex54 is another example based on 2D problem discretized with quadrilateral
942 finite elements. For this example, the user can define the scaling of material
943 coefficient in embedded circle called $\alpha$.
945 For more technical details on these applications, interested readers are invited
946 to read the codes available in the PETSc sources. Those problems have been
947 chosen because they are scalable with many cores.
949 In the following larger experiments are described on two large scale
950 architectures: Curie and Juqueen. Both these architectures are supercomputer
951 respectively composed of 80,640 cores for Curie and 458,752 cores for
952 Juqueen. Those machines are respectively hosted by GENCI in France and Jülich
953 Supercomputing Centre in Germany. They belongs with other similar architectures
954 of the PRACE initiative (Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe) which
955 aims at proposing high performance supercomputing architecture to enhance
956 research in Europe. The Curie architecture is composed of Intel E5-2680
957 processors at 2.7 GHz with 2Gb memory by core. The Juqueen architecture is
958 composed of IBM PowerPC A2 at 1.6 GHz with 1Gb memory per core. Both those
959 architecture are equiped with a dedicated high speed network.
962 In many situations, using preconditioners is essential in order to find the
963 solution of a linear system. There are many preconditioners available in PETSc.
964 For parallel applications all the preconditioners based on matrix factorization
965 are not available. In our experiments, we have tested different kinds of
966 preconditioners, however as it is not the subject of this paper, we will not
967 present results with many preconditioners. In practice, we have chosen to use a
968 multigrid (mg) and successive over-relaxation (sor). For more details on the
969 preconditioner in PETSc please consult~\cite{petsc-web-page}.
975 \begin{tabular}{|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|}
978 nb. cores & precond & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{FGMRES} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM CGLS} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM LSQR} & best gain \\
980 & & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & \\\hline \hline
981 2,048 & mg & 403.49 & 18,210 & 73.89 & 3,060 & 77.84 & 3,270 & 5.46 \\
982 2,048 & sor & 745.37 & 57,060 & 87.31 & 6,150 & 104.21 & 7,230 & 8.53 \\
983 4,096 & mg & 562.25 & 25,170 & 97.23 & 3,990 & 89.71 & 3,630 & 6.27 \\
984 4,096 & sor & 912.12 & 70,194 & 145.57 & 9,750 & 168.97 & 10,980 & 6.26 \\
985 8,192 & mg & 917.02 & 40,290 & 148.81 & 5,730 & 143.03 & 5,280 & 6.41 \\
986 8,192 & sor & 1,404.53 & 106,530 & 212.55 & 12,990 & 180.97 & 10,470 & 7.76 \\
987 16,384 & mg & 1,430.56 & 63,930 & 237.17 & 8,310 & 244.26 & 7,950 & 6.03 \\
988 16,384 & sor & 2,852.14 & 216,240 & 418.46 & 21,690 & 505.26 & 23,970 & 6.82 \\
992 \caption{Comparison of FGMRES and TSIRM with FGMRES for example ex15 of PETSc with two preconditioners (mg and sor) with 25,000 components per core on Juqueen ($\epsilon_{tsirm}=1e-3$, $max\_iter_{kryl}=30$, $s=12$, $max\_iter_{ls}=15$, $\epsilon_{ls}=1e-40$), time is expressed in seconds.}
997 Table~\ref{tab:03} shows the execution times and the number of iterations of
998 example ex15 of PETSc on the Juqueen architecture. Different numbers of cores
999 are studied ranging from 2,048 up-to 16,383 with the two preconditioners {\it
1000 mg} and {\it sor}. For those experiments, the number of components (or
1001 unknowns of the problems) per core is fixed to 25,000, also called weak
1002 scaling. This number can seem relatively small. In fact, for some applications
1003 that need a lot of memory, the number of components per processor requires
1004 sometimes to be small. Other parameters for this application are described in
1005 the legend of this Table.
1009 In Table~\ref{tab:03}, we can notice that TSIRM is always faster than
1010 FGMRES. The last column shows the ratio between FGMRES and the best version of
1011 TSIRM according to the minimization procedure: CGLS or LSQR. Even if we have
1012 computed the worst case between CGLS and LSQR, it is clear that TSIRM is always
1013 faster than FGMRES. For this example, the multigrid preconditioner is faster
1014 than SOR. The gain between TSIRM and FGMRES is more or less similar for the two
1015 preconditioners. Looking at the number of iterations to reach the convergence,
1016 it is obvious that TSIRM allows the reduction of the number of iterations. It
1017 should be noticed that for TSIRM, in those experiments, only the iterations of
1018 the Krylov solver are taken into account. Iterations of CGLS or LSQR were not
1019 recorded but they are time-consuming. In general each $max\_iter_{kryl}*s$
1020 iterations which corresponds to 30*12, there are $max\_iter_{ls}$ iterations for
1021 the least-squares method which corresponds to 15.
1023 \begin{figure}[htbp]
1025 \includegraphics[width=0.45\textwidth]{nb_iter_sec_ex15_juqueen}
1026 \caption{Number of iterations per second with ex15 and the same parameters than in Table~\ref{tab:03} (weak scaling)}
1031 In Figure~\ref{fig:01}, the number of iterations per second corresponding to
1032 Table~\ref{tab:03} is displayed. It can be noticed that the number of
1033 iterations per second of FMGRES is constant whereas it decreases with TSIRM with
1034 both preconditioners. This can be explained by the fact that when the number of
1035 cores increases the time for the least-squares minimization step also increases but, generally,
1036 when the number of cores increases, the number of iterations to reach the
1037 threshold also increases, and, in that case, TSIRM is more efficient to reduce
1038 the number of iterations. So, the overall benefit of using TSIRM is interesting.
1045 \begin{table*}[htbp]
1047 \begin{tabular}{|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|}
1050 nb. cores & $\epsilon_{tsirm}$ & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{FGMRES} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM CGLS} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM LSQR} & best gain \\
1052 & & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & \\\hline \hline
1053 2,048 & 8e-5 & 108.88 & 16,560 & 23.06 & 3,630 & 22.79 & 3,630 & 4.77 \\
1054 2,048 & 6e-5 & 194.01 & 30,270 & 35.50 & 5,430 & 27.74 & 4,350 & 6.99 \\
1055 4,096 & 7e-5 & 160.59 & 22,530 & 35.15 & 5,130 & 29.21 & 4,350 & 5.49 \\
1056 4,096 & 6e-5 & 249.27 & 35,520 & 52.13 & 7,950 & 39.24 & 5,790 & 6.35 \\
1057 8,192 & 6e-5 & 149.54 & 17,280 & 28.68 & 3,810 & 29.05 & 3,990 & 5.21 \\
1058 8,192 & 5e-5 & 785.04 & 109,590 & 76.07 & 10,470 & 69.42 & 9,030 & 11.30 \\
1059 16,384 & 4e-5 & 718.61 & 86,400 & 98.98 & 10,830 & 131.86 & 14,790 & 7.26 \\
1063 \caption{Comparison of FGMRES and TSIRM with FGMRES algorithms for ex54 of Petsc (both with the MG preconditioner) with 25,000 components per core on Curie ($max\_iter_{kryl}=30$, $s=12$, $max\_iter_{ls}=15$, $\epsilon_{ls}=1e-40$), time is expressed in seconds.}
1069 In Table~\ref{tab:04}, some experiments with example ex54 on the Curie
1070 architecture are reported. For this application, we fixed $\alpha=0.6$. As it
1071 can be seen in that Table, the size of the problem has a strong influence on the
1072 number of iterations to reach the convergence. That is why we have preferred to
1073 change the threshold. If we set it to $1e-3$ as with the previous application,
1074 only one iteration is necessary to reach the convergence. So Table~\ref{tab:04}
1075 shows the results of different executions with different number of cores and
1076 different thresholds. As with the previous example, we can observe that TSIRM is
1077 faster than FGMRES. The ratio greatly depends on the number of iterations for
1078 FMGRES to reach the threshold. The greater the number of iterations to reach the
1079 convergence is, the better the ratio between our algorithm and FMGRES is. This
1080 experiment is also a weak scaling with approximately $25,000$ components per
1081 core. It can also be observed that the difference between CGLS and LSQR is not
1082 significant. Both can be good but it seems not possible to know in advance which
1083 one will be the best.
1085 Table~\ref{tab:05} show a strong scaling experiment with the exemple ex54 on the
1086 Curie architecture. So in this case, the number of unknownws is fixed to
1087 $204,919,225$ and the number of cores ranges from $512$ to $8192$ with the power
1088 of two. The threshold is fixed to $5e-5$ and only the $mg$ preconditioner has
1089 been tested. Here again we can see that TSIRM is faster that FGMRES. Efficiency
1090 of each algorithm is reported. It can be noticed that the efficiency of FGMRES
1091 is better than the TSIRM one except with $8,192$ cores and that its efficiency
1092 is greater that one whereas the efficiency of TSIRM is lower than
1093 one. Nevertheless, the ratio of TSIRM with any version of the least-squares
1094 method is always faster. With $8,192$ cores when the number of iterations is
1095 far more important for FGMRES, we can see that it is only slightly more
1096 important for TSIRM.
1098 In Figure~\ref{fig:02} we report the number of iterations per second for
1099 experiments reported in Table~\ref{tab:05}. This Figure highlights that the
1100 number of iterations per second is more of less the same for FGMRES and TSIRM
1101 with a little advantage for FGMRES. It can be explained by the fact that, as we
1102 have previously explained, that the iterations of the least-squares steps are not
1103 taken into account with TSIRM.
1105 \begin{table*}[htbp]
1107 \begin{tabular}{|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|r|}
1110 nb. cores & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{FGMRES} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM CGLS} & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{TSIRM LSQR} & best gain & \multicolumn{3}{c|}{efficiency} \\
1111 \cline{2-7} \cline{9-11}
1112 & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & Time & \# Iter. & & FGMRES & TS CGLS & TS LSQR\\\hline \hline
1113 512 & 3,969.69 & 33,120 & 709.57 & 5,790 & 622.76 & 5,070 & 6.37 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\
1114 1024 & 1,530.06 & 25,860 & 290.95 & 4,830 & 307.71 & 5,070 & 5.25 & 1.30 & 1.21 & 1.01 \\
1115 2048 & 919.62 & 31,470 & 237.52 & 8,040 & 194.22 & 6,510 & 4.73 & 1.08 & .75 & .80\\
1116 4096 & 405.60 & 28,380 & 111.67 & 7,590 & 91.72 & 6,510 & 4.42 & 1.22 & .79 & .84 \\
1117 8192 & 785.04 & 109,590 & 76.07 & 10,470 & 69.42 & 9,030 & 11.30 & .32 & .58 & .56 \\
1122 \caption{Comparison of FGMRES and TSIRM for ex54 of PETSc (both with the MG preconditioner) with 204,919,225 components on Curie with different number of cores ($\epsilon_{tsirm}=5e-5$, $max\_iter_{kryl}=30$, $s=12$, $max\_iter_{ls}=15$, $\epsilon_{ls}=1e-40$), time is expressed in seconds.}
1127 \begin{figure}[htbp]
1129 \includegraphics[width=0.45\textwidth]{nb_iter_sec_ex54_curie}
1130 \caption{Number of iterations per second with ex54 and the same parameters than in Table~\ref{tab:05} (strong scaling)}
1135 Concerning the experiments some other remarks are interesting.
1137 \item We have tested other examples of PETSc (ex29, ex45, ex49). For all these
1138 examples, we also obtained similar gain between GMRES and TSIRM but those
1139 examples are not scalable with many cores. In general, we had some problems
1140 with more than $4,096$ cores.
1141 \item We have tested many iterative solvers available in PETSc. In fact, it is
1142 possible to use most of them with TSIRM. From our point of view, the condition
1143 to use a solver inside TSIRM is that the solver must have a restart
1144 feature. More precisely, the solver must support to be stopped and restarted
1145 without decrease its converge. That is why with GMRES we stop it when it is
1146 naturally restarted (i.e. with $m$ the restart parameter). The Conjugate
1147 Gradient (CG) and all its variants do not have ``restarted'' version in PETSc,
1148 so they are not efficient. They will converge with TSIRM but not quickly
1149 because if we compare a normal CG with a CG for which we stop it each 16
1150 iterations for example, the normal CG will be for more efficient. Some
1151 restarted CG or CG variant versions exist and may be interested to study in
1154 %%%*********************************************************
1155 %%%*********************************************************
1159 %%%*********************************************************
1160 %%%*********************************************************
1161 \section{Conclusion}
1163 %The conclusion goes here. this is more of the conclusion
1164 %%%*********************************************************
1165 %%%*********************************************************
1167 A novel two-stage iterative algorithm has been proposed in this article,
1168 in order to accelerate the convergence Krylov iterative methods.
1169 Our TSIRM proposal acts as a merger between Krylov based solvers and
1170 a least-squares minimization step.
1171 The convergence of the method has been proven in some situations, while
1172 experiments up to 16,394 cores have been led to verify that TSIRM runs
1173 5 or 7 times faster than GMRES.
1176 For future work, the authors' intention is to investigate other kinds of
1177 matrices, problems, and inner solvers. The influence of all parameters must be
1178 tested too, while other methods to minimize the residuals must be regarded. The
1179 number of outer iterations to minimize should become adaptative to improve the
1180 overall performances of the proposal. Finally, this solver will be implemented
1181 inside PETSc. This would be very interesting because it would allow us to test
1182 all the non-linear examples and compare our algorithm with the other algorithm
1183 implemented in PETSc.
1186 % conference papers do not normally have an appendix
1190 % use section* for acknowledgement
1191 %%%*********************************************************
1192 %%%*********************************************************
1193 \section*{Acknowledgment}
1194 This paper is partially funded by the Labex ACTION program (contract
1195 ANR-11-LABX-01-01). We acknowledge PRACE for awarding us access to resources
1196 Curie and Juqueen respectively based in France and Germany.
1200 % trigger a \newpage just before the given reference
1201 % number - used to balance the columns on the last page
1202 % adjust value as needed - may need to be readjusted if
1203 % the document is modified later
1204 %\IEEEtriggeratref{8}
1205 % The "triggered" command can be changed if desired:
1206 %\IEEEtriggercmd{\enlargethispage{-5in}}
1208 % references section
1210 % can use a bibliography generated by BibTeX as a .bbl file
1211 % BibTeX documentation can be easily obtained at:
1212 % http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/biblio/bibtex/contrib/doc/
1213 % The IEEEtran BibTeX style support page is at:
1214 % http://www.michaelshell.org/tex/ieeetran/bibtex/
1215 \bibliographystyle{IEEEtran}
1216 % argument is your BibTeX string definitions and bibliography database(s)
1217 \bibliography{biblio}
1219 % <OR> manually copy in the resultant .bbl file
1220 % set second argument of \begin to the number of references
1221 % (used to reserve space for the reference number labels box)
1222 %% \begin{thebibliography}{1}
1224 %% \bibitem{saad86} Y.~Saad and M.~H.~Schultz, \emph{GMRES: A Generalized Minimal Residual Algorithm for Solving Nonsymmetric Linear Systems}, SIAM Journal on Scientific and Statistical Computing, 7(3):856--869, 1986.
1226 %% \bibitem{saad96} Y.~Saad, \emph{Iterative Methods for Sparse Linear Systems}, PWS Publishing, New York, 1996.
1228 %% \bibitem{hestenes52} M.~R.~Hestenes and E.~Stiefel, \emph{Methods of conjugate gradients for solving linear system}, Journal of Research of National Bureau of Standards, B49:409--436, 1952.
1230 %% \bibitem{paige82} C.~C.~Paige and A.~M.~Saunders, \emph{LSQR: An Algorithm for Sparse Linear Equations and Sparse Least Squares}, ACM Trans. Math. Softw. 8(1):43--71, 1982.
1231 %% \end{thebibliography}