X-Git-Url: https://bilbo.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/and/gitweb/book_gpu.git/blobdiff_plain/4c07e9cc681b9a8ed54d9a1b48e9d8b00af63126..fd7d6f1c6c149f79839200277703c9ef950150f8:/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter1/ch1.tex?ds=inline diff --git a/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter1/ch1.tex b/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter1/ch1.tex index c69a60e..2fef3a4 100755 --- a/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter1/ch1.tex +++ b/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter1/ch1.tex @@ -5,19 +5,17 @@ \label{chapter1} \section{Introduction}\label{ch1:intro} - This chapter introduces the Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) architecture and all the concepts needed to understand how GPUs work and can be used to speed up the execution of some algorithms. First of all this chapter gives a brief history of -the development of the graphics cards up to the point when they started being used in order to make -general purpose computation. Then the architecture of a GPU is -illustrated. There are many fundamental differences between a GPU and a -tradition processor. In order to benefit from the power of a GPU, a CUDA +the development of the graphics cards up to the point when they started being +used in order to perform general purpose computations. Then the architecture of +a GPU is illustrated. There are many fundamental differences between a GPU and +a traditional processor. In order to benefit from the power of a GPU, a CUDA programmer needs to use threads. They have some particularities which enable the CUDA model to be efficient and scalable when some constraints are addressed. - - +\clearpage \section{Brief history of the video card} Video cards or graphics cards have been introduced in personal computers to @@ -26,9 +24,9 @@ produce high quality graphics faster than classical Central Processing Units repetitive and very specific. Hence, some manufacturers have produced more and more sophisticated video cards, providing 2D accelerations, then 3D accelerations, then some light transforms. Video cards own their own memory to perform their -computation. For at least two decades, every personal computer has had a video +computations. For at least two decades, every personal computer has had a video card which is simple for desktop computers or which provides many accelerations -for game and/or graphic-oriented computers. In the latter case, graphic cards +for game and/or graphic-oriented computers. In the latter case, graphics cards may be more expensive than a CPU. Since 2000, video cards have allowed users to apply arithmetic operations @@ -42,7 +40,7 @@ handle the stream data with pipelines. Some researchers tried to apply those operations on other data, representing something different from pixels, and consequently this resulted in the first -uses of video cards for performing general purpose computation. The programming +uses of video cards for performing general purpose computations. The programming model was not easy to use at all and was very dependent on the hardware constraints. More precisely it consisted in using either DirectX of OpenGL functions providing an interface to some classical operations for videos @@ -54,27 +52,27 @@ wrong, programmers had no way (and no tools) to detect it. In order to benefit from the computing power of more recent video cards, CUDA was first proposed in 2007 by NVIDIA. It unifies the programming model for some -of their most efficient video cards. CUDA~\cite{ch1:cuda} has quickly been +of their most efficient video cards. CUDA~\cite{ch1:cuda} has quickly been considered by the scientific community as a great advance for general purpose graphics processing unit (GPGPU) computing. Of course other programming models have been proposed. The other well-known alternative is OpenCL which aims at -proposing an alternative to CUDA and which is multiplatform and portable. This +proposing an alternative to CUDA and which is multiplatform and portable. This is a great advantage since it is even possible to execute OpenCL programs on -traditional CPUs. The main drawback is that it is less tight with the hardware -and consequently sometimes provides less efficient programs. Moreover, CUDA +traditional CPUs. The main drawback is that it is less close to the hardware +and consequently it sometimes provides less efficient programs. Moreover, CUDA benefits from more mature compilation and optimization procedures. Other less -known environments have been proposed, but most of them have been discontinued, for -example we can cite, FireStream by ATI which is not maintained anymore and -has been replaced by OpenCL, BrookGPU by Standford University~\cite{ch1:Buck:2004:BGS}. -Another environment based on pragma (insertion of pragma directives inside the -code to help the compiler to generate efficient code) is called OpenACC. For a +known environments have been proposed, but most of them have been discontinued, +such FireStream by ATI which is not maintained anymore and has been replaced by +OpenCL and BrookGPU by Stanford University~\cite{ch1:Buck:2004:BGS}. Another +environment based on pragma (insertion of pragma directives inside the code to +help the compiler to generate efficient code) is called OpenACC. For a comparison with OpenCL, interested readers may refer to~\cite{ch1:Dongarra}. \section{Architecture of current GPUs} -The architecture \index{architecture of a GPU} of current GPUs is constantly +The architecture \index{GPU!architecture of a} of current GPUs is constantly evolving. Nevertheless some trends remain constant throughout this evolution. Processing units composing a GPU are far simpler than a traditional CPU and it is much easier to integrate many computing units inside a GPU card than to do @@ -93,7 +91,7 @@ only the data change. It is important to keep in mind that multiprocessors inside a GPU have 32 cores. Later we will see that these 32 cores need to do the same work to get maximum performance. -\begin{figure}[b!] +\begin{figure}[t!] \centerline{\includegraphics[]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/nb_cores_CPU_GPU.pdf}} \caption{Comparison of number of cores in a CPU and in a GPU.} %[Comparison of number of cores in a CPU and in a GPU] @@ -102,10 +100,10 @@ same work to get maximum performance. On the most powerful GPU cards, called Fermi, multiprocessors are called streaming multiprocessors (SMs). Each SM contains 32 cores and is able to perform 32 -floating points or integer operations per clock on 32 bit numbers or 16 floating -points per clock on 64 bit numbers. SMs have their own registers, execution +floating points or integer operations per clock on 32-bit numbers or 16 floating +points per clock on 64-bit numbers. SMs have their own registers, execution pipelines and caches. On Fermi architecture, there are 64Kb shared memory plus L1 -cache and 32,536 32 bit registers per SM. More precisely the programmer can +cache and 32,536 32-bit registers per SM. More precisely the programmer can decide what amounts of shared memory and L1 cache SM are to be used. The constraint is that the sum of both amounts should be less than or equal to 64Kb. @@ -113,7 +111,7 @@ Threads are used to benefit from the large number of cores of a GPU. These threads are different from traditional threads for a CPU. In Chapter~\ref{chapter2}, some examples of GPU programming will explain the details of the GPU threads. Threads are gathered into blocks of 32 -threads, called warps. These warps are important when designing an algorithm +threads, called ``warps''. These warps are important when designing an algorithm for GPU. @@ -123,30 +121,32 @@ through the use of cache memories. Moreover, nowadays CPUs carry out ma performance optimizations such as speculative execution which roughly speaking consists of executing a small part of the code in advance even if later this work reveals itself to be useless. GPUs do not have low latency -memory. In comparison GPUs have small cache memories. Nevertheless the +memory. In comparison GPUs have small cache memories; nevertheless the architecture of GPUs is optimized for throughput computation and it takes into account the memory latency. -\begin{figure}[b!] -\centerline{\includegraphics[scale=0.7]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/low_latency_vs_high_throughput.pdf}} -\caption{Comparison of low latency of a CPU and high throughput of a GPU.} -\label{ch1:fig:latency_throughput} -\end{figure} + Figure~\ref{ch1:fig:latency_throughput} illustrates the main difference of memory latency between a CPU and a GPU. In a CPU, tasks ``ti'' are executed one by one with a short memory latency to get the data to process. After some tasks, there is a context switch that allows the CPU to run concurrent applications -and/or multi-threaded applications. {\bf REPHRASE} Memory latencies are longer in a GPU, the +and/or multi-threaded applications. Memory latencies are longer in a GPU. The principle to obtain a high throughput is to have many tasks to compute. Later we will see that these tasks are called threads with CUDA. With this principle, as soon as a task is finished the next one is ready to be -executed while the wait for data for the previous task is overlapped by -computation of other tasks. {\bf HERE} +executed while the wait for data for the previous task is overlapped by the +computation of other tasks. +\clearpage +\begin{figure}[t!] +\centerline{\includegraphics[scale=0.7]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/low_latency_vs_high_throughput.pdf}} +\caption{Comparison of low latency of a CPU and high throughput of a GPU.} +\label{ch1:fig:latency_throughput} +\end{figure} \section{Kinds of parallelism} @@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ GPUs. Task parallelism is the common parallelism achieved on clusters and grids and high performance architectures where different tasks are executed by different computing units. - +\clearpage \section{CUDA multithreading} The data parallelism of CUDA is more precisely based on the Single Instruction @@ -188,11 +188,7 @@ threads, called warps. Each SM alternatively executes active warps and warps becoming temporarily inactive due to waiting of data (as shown in Figure~\ref{ch1:fig:latency_throughput}). -\begin{figure}[b!] -\centerline{\includegraphics[scale=0.65]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/scalability.pdf}} -\caption{Scalability of GPU.} -\label{ch1:fig:scalability} -\end{figure} + The key to scalability in the CUDA model is the use of a huge number of threads. In practice, threads are gathered not only in warps but also in thread blocks. A @@ -211,18 +207,25 @@ independence between thread blocks provides the scalability of CUDA codes. A kernel is a function which contains a block of instructions that are executed -by the threads of a GPU. When the problem considered is a two-dimensional or three-dimensional problem, it is possible to group thread blocks into a grid. In -practice, the number of thread blocks and the size of thread blocks are given as -parameters to each kernel. Figure~\ref{ch1:fig:scalability} illustrates an +by the threads of a GPU. When the problem considered is a two-dimensional or +three-dimensional problem, it is possible to group thread blocks into a grid. +In practice, the number of thread blocks and the size of thread blocks are given +as parameters to each kernel. Figure~\ref{ch1:fig:scalability} illustrates an example of a kernel composed of 8 thread blocks. Then this kernel is executed on -a small device containing only 2 SMs. {\bf RELIRE} So in this case, blocks are executed 2 -by 2 in any order. If the kernel is executed on a larger CUDA device containing -4 SMs, blocks are executed 4 by 4 simultaneously. The execution times should be -approximately twice faster in the latter case. Of course, that depends on other +a small device containing only 2 SMs. So in this case, blocks are executed 2 by +2 in any order. If the kernel is executed on a larger CUDA device containing 4 +SMs, blocks are executed 4 by 4 simultaneously. The execution times should be +approximately twice as fast in the latter case. Of course, that depends on other parameters that will be described later (in this chapter and other chapters). -{\bf RELIRE} -Thread blocks provide a way to cooperation in the sense that threads of the same + +\begin{figure}[t!] +\centerline{\includegraphics[scale=0.65]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/scalability.pdf}} +\caption{Scalability of GPU.} +\label{ch1:fig:scalability} +\end{figure} + +Thread blocks provide a way to cooperate in the sense that threads of the same block cooperatively load and store blocks of memory they all use. Synchronizations of threads in the same block are possible (but not between threads of different blocks). Threads of the same block can also share results @@ -232,11 +235,11 @@ will explain that. \section{Memory hierarchy} -The memory hierarchy of GPUs\index{memory~hierarchy} is different from that of CPUs. In practice, there are registers\index{memory~hierarchy!registers}, local -memory\index{memory~hierarchy!local~memory}, shared -memory\index{memory~hierarchy!shared~memory}, cache -memory\index{memory~hierarchy!cache~memory}, and global -memory\index{memory~hierarchy!global~memory}. +The memory hierarchy of GPUs\index{memory hierarchy} is different from that of CPUs. In practice, there are registers\index{memory hierarchy!registers}, local +memory\index{memory hierarchy!local memory}, shared +memory\index{memory hierarchy!shared memory}, cache +memory\index{memory hierarchy!cache memory}, and global +memory\index{memory hierarchy!global memory}. As previously mentioned each thread can access its own registers. It is @@ -246,10 +249,10 @@ very fast, so it is a good idea to use them whenever possible. Likewise each thread can access local memory which, in practice, is much slower than registers. Local memory is automatically used by the compiler when all the -registers are occupied. So the best idea is to optimize the use of registers +registers are occupied, so the best idea is to optimize the use of registers even if this involves reducing the number of threads per block. -\begin{figure}[hbtp!] +\begin{figure}[b!] \centerline{\includegraphics[scale=0.60]{Chapters/chapter1/figures/memory_hierarchy.pdf}} \caption{Memory hierarchy of a GPU.} \label{ch1:fig:memory_hierarchy} @@ -264,7 +267,7 @@ to fill the shared memory at the start of the kernel with global data that are used very frequently, then threads can access it for their computation. Threads can obviously change the content of this shared memory either with computation or by loading other data and they can store its content in the global memory. So -shared memory can be seen as a cache memory manageable manually. This +shared memory can be seen as a cache memory which is manageable manually. This obviously requires an effort from the programmer. On recent cards, the programmer may decide what amount of cache memory and @@ -281,7 +284,7 @@ own registers and their local memory. Threads of the same block can access the shared memory of that block. The cache memory is not represented here but it is local to a thread. Then each block can access the global memory of the GPU. - +\clearpage \section{Conclusion} In this chapter, a brief presentation of the video card, which has later been