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48 \title{Simulation of Asynchronous Iterative Algorithms Using SimGrid}
52 Charles Emile Ramamonjisoa\IEEEauthorrefmark{1},
53 Lilia Ziane Khodja\IEEEauthorrefmark{2},
54 David Laiymani\IEEEauthorrefmark{1},
55 Arnaud Giersch\IEEEauthorrefmark{1} and
56 Raphaël Couturier\IEEEauthorrefmark{1}
58 \IEEEauthorblockA{\IEEEauthorrefmark{1}%
59 Femto-ST Institute -- DISC Department\\
60 Université de Franche-Comté,
61 IUT de Belfort-Montbéliard\\
62 19 avenue du Maréchal Juin, BP 527, 90016 Belfort cedex, France\\
63 Email: \email{{charles.ramamonjisoa,david.laiymani,arnaud.giersch,raphael.couturier}@univ-fcomte.fr}
65 \IEEEauthorblockA{\IEEEauthorrefmark{2}%
66 Inria Bordeaux Sud-Ouest\\
67 200 avenue de la Vieille Tour, 33405 Talence cedex, France \\
68 Email: \email{lilia.ziane@inria.fr}
76 Synchronous iterative algorithms are often less scalable than asynchronous
77 iterative ones. Performing large scale experiments with different kind of
78 network parameters is not easy because with supercomputers such parameters are
79 fixed. So one solution consists in using simulations first in order to analyze
80 what parameters could influence or not the behaviors of an algorithm. In this
81 paper, we show that it is interesting to use SimGrid to simulate the behaviors
82 of asynchronous iterative algorithms. For that, we compare the behaviour of a
83 synchronous GMRES algorithm with an asynchronous multisplitting one with
84 simulations in which we choose some parameters. Both codes are real MPI
85 codes. Simulations allow us to see when the multisplitting algorithm can be more
86 efficient than the GMRES one to solve a 3D Poisson problem.
89 % no keywords for IEEE conferences
90 % Keywords: Algorithm distributed iterative asynchronous simulation SimGrid
93 \section{Introduction}
95 Parallel computing and high performance computing (HPC) are becoming more and more imperative for solving various
96 problems raised by researchers on various scientific disciplines but also by industrial in the field. Indeed, the
97 increasing complexity of these requested applications combined with a continuous increase of their sizes lead to write
98 distributed and parallel algorithms requiring significant hardware resources (grid computing, clusters, broadband
99 network, etc.) but also a non-negligible CPU execution time. We consider in this paper a class of highly efficient
100 parallel algorithms called \emph{iterative algorithms} executed in a distributed environment. As their name
101 suggests, these algorithms solve a given problem by successive iterations ($X_{n +1} = f(X_{n})$) from an initial value
102 $X_{0}$ to find an approximate value $X^*$ of the solution with a very low residual error. Several well-known methods
103 demonstrate the convergence of these algorithms~\cite{BT89,Bahi07}.
105 Parallelization of such algorithms generally involve the division of the problem into several \emph{blocks} that will
106 be solved in parallel on multiple processing units. The latter will communicate each intermediate results before a new
107 iteration starts and until the approximate solution is reached. These parallel computations can be performed either in
108 \emph{synchronous} mode where a new iteration begins only when all nodes communications are completed,
109 or in \emph{asynchronous} mode where processors can continue independently with few or no synchronization points. For
110 instance in the \textit{Asynchronous Iterations~-- Asynchronous Communications (AIAC)} model~\cite{bcvc06:ij}, local
111 computations do not need to wait for required data. Processors can then perform their iterations with the data present
112 at that time. Even if the number of iterations required before the convergence is generally greater than for the
113 synchronous case, AIAC algorithms can significantly reduce overall execution times by suppressing idle times due to
114 synchronizations especially in a grid computing context (see~\cite{Bahi07} for more details).
116 Parallel (synchronous or asynchronous) applications may have different
117 configuration and deployment requirements. Quantifying their resource
118 allocation policies and application scheduling algorithms in grid computing
119 environments under varying load, CPU power and network speeds is very costly,
120 very labor intensive and very time
121 consuming~\cite{Calheiros:2011:CTM:1951445.1951450}. The case of AIAC
122 algorithms is even more problematic since they are very sensible to the
123 execution environment context. For instance, variations in the network bandwidth
124 (intra and inter-clusters), in the number and the power of nodes, in the number
125 of clusters\dots{} can lead to very different number of iterations and so to
126 very different execution times. Then, it appears that the use of simulation
127 tools to explore various platform scenarios and to run large numbers of
128 experiments quickly can be very promising. In this way, the use of a simulation
129 environment to execute parallel iterative algorithms found some interests in
130 reducing the highly cost of access to computing resources: (1) for the
131 applications development life cycle and in code debugging (2) and in production
132 to get results in a reasonable execution time with a simulated infrastructure
133 not accessible with physical resources. Indeed, the launch of distributed
134 iterative asynchronous algorithms to solve a given problem on a large-scale
135 simulated environment challenges to find optimal configurations giving the best
136 results with a lowest residual error and in the best of execution time.
139 To our knowledge, there is no existing work on the large-scale simulation of a
140 real AIAC application. {\bf The contribution of the present paper can be
141 summarised in two main points}. First we give a first approach of the
142 simulation of AIAC algorithms using a simulation tool (i.e. the SimGrid
143 toolkit~\cite{SimGrid}). Second, we confirm the effectiveness of the
144 asynchronous multisplitting algorithm by comparing its performance with the
145 synchronous GMRES (Generalized Minimal Residual) \cite{ref1}. Both these codes
146 can be used to solve large linear systems. In this paper, we focus on a 3D
147 Poisson problem. We show, that with minor modifications of the initial MPI
148 code, the SimGrid toolkit allows us to perform a test campaign of a real AIAC
149 application on different computing architectures.
150 % The simulated results we
151 %obtained are in line with real results exposed in ??\AG[]{ref?}.
152 SimGrid had allowed us to launch the application from a modest computing
153 infrastructure by simulating different distributed architectures composed by
154 clusters nodes interconnected by variable speed networks. Parameters of the
155 network platforms are the bandwidth and the latency of inter cluster
156 network. Parameters on the cluster's architecture are the number of machines and
157 the computation power of a machine. Simulations show that the asynchronous
158 multisplitting algorithm can solve the 3D Poisson problem approximately twice
159 faster than GMRES with two distant clusters.
163 This article is structured as follows: after this introduction, the next section
164 will give a brief description of iterative asynchronous model. Then, the
165 simulation framework SimGrid is presented with the settings to create various
166 distributed architectures. Then, the multisplitting method is presented, it is
167 based on GMRES to solve each block obtained of the splitting. This code is
168 written with MPI primitives and its adaptation to SimGrid with SMPI (Simulated
169 MPI) is detailed in the next section. At last, the simulation results carried
170 out will be presented before some concluding remarks and future works.
173 \section{Motivations and scientific context}
175 As exposed in the introduction, parallel iterative methods are now widely used
176 in many scientific domains. They can be classified in three main classes
177 depending on how iterations and communications are managed (for more details
178 readers can refer to~\cite{bcvc06:ij}). In the \textit{Synchronous Iterations~--
179 Synchronous Communications (SISC)} model data are exchanged at the end of each
180 iteration. All the processors must begin the same iteration at the same time and
181 important idle times on processors are generated. The \textit{Synchronous
182 Iterations~-- Asynchronous Communications (SIAC)} model can be compared to the
183 previous one except that data required on another processor are sent
184 asynchronously i.e. without stopping current computations. This technique
185 allows to partially overlap communications by computations but unfortunately,
186 the overlapping is only partial and important idle times remain. It is clear
187 that, in a grid computing context, where the number of computational nodes is
188 large, heterogeneous and widely distributed, the idle times generated by
189 synchronizations are very penalizing. One way to overcome this problem is to use
190 the \textit{Asynchronous Iterations~-- Asynchronous Communications (AIAC)}
191 model. Here, local computations do not need to wait for required
192 data. Processors can then perform their iterations with the data present at that
193 time. Figure~\ref{fig:aiac} illustrates this model where the gray blocks
194 represent the computation phases. With this algorithmic model, the number of
195 iterations required before the convergence is generally greater than for the two
196 former classes. But, and as detailed in~\cite{bcvc06:ij}, AIAC algorithms can
197 significantly reduce overall execution times by suppressing idle times due to
198 synchronizations especially in a grid computing context.
199 %\LZK{Répétition par rapport à l'intro}
203 \includegraphics[width=8cm]{AIAC.pdf}
204 \caption{The Asynchronous Iterations~-- Asynchronous Communications model}
208 \RC{Je serais partant de virer AIAC et laisser asynchronous algorithms... à voir}
210 %% It is very challenging to develop efficient applications for large scale,
211 %% heterogeneous and distributed platforms such as computing grids. Researchers and
212 %% engineers have to develop techniques for maximizing application performance of
213 %% these multi-cluster platforms, by redesigning the applications and/or by using
214 %% novel algorithms that can account for the composite and heterogeneous nature of
215 %% the platform. Unfortunately, the deployment of such applications on these very
216 %% large scale systems is very costly, labor intensive and time consuming. In this
217 %% context, it appears that the use of simulation tools to explore various platform
218 %% scenarios at will and to run enormous numbers of experiments quickly can be very
219 %% promising. Several works\dots{}
221 %% \AG{Several works\dots{} what?\\
222 % Le paragraphe suivant se trouve déjà dans l'intro ?}
223 In the context of asynchronous algorithms, the number of iterations to reach the
224 convergence depends on the delay of messages. With synchronous iterations, the
225 number of iterations is exactly the same than in the sequential mode (if the
226 parallelization process does not change the algorithm). So the difficulty with
227 asynchronous algorithms comes from the fact it is necessary to run the algorithm
228 with real data. In fact, from an execution to another the order of messages will
229 change and the number of iterations to reach the convergence will also change.
230 According to all the parameters of the platform (number of nodes, power of
231 nodes, inter and intra clusrters bandwith and latency, ....) and of the
232 algorithm (number of splitting with the multisplitting algorithm), the
233 multisplitting code will obtain the solution more or less quickly. Or course,
234 the GMRES method also depends of the same parameters. As it is difficult to have
235 access to many clusters, grids or supercomputers with many different network
236 parameters, it is interesting to be able to simulate the behaviors of
237 asynchronous iterative algoritms before being able to runs real experiments.
246 SimGrid~\cite{SimGrid,casanova+legrand+quinson.2008.simgrid} is a simulation
247 framework to study the behavior of large-scale distributed systems. As its name
248 says, it emanates from the grid computing community, but is nowadays used to
249 study grids, clouds, HPC or peer-to-peer systems. The early versions of SimGrid
250 date from 1999, but it's still actively developed and distributed as an open
251 source software. Today, it's one of the major generic tools in the field of
252 simulation for large-scale distributed systems.
254 SimGrid provides several programming interfaces: MSG to simulate Concurrent
255 Sequential Processes, SimDAG to simulate DAGs of (parallel) tasks, and SMPI to
256 run real applications written in MPI~\cite{MPI}. Apart from the native C
257 interface, SimGrid provides bindings for the C++, Java, Lua and Ruby programming
258 languages. SMPI is the interface that has been used for the work exposed in
259 this paper. The SMPI interface implements about \np[\%]{80} of the MPI 2.0
260 standard~\cite{bedaride:hal-00919507}, and supports applications written in C or
261 Fortran, with little or no modifications.
263 Within SimGrid, the execution of a distributed application is simulated on a
264 single machine. The application code is really executed, but some operations
265 like the communications are intercepted, and their running time is computed
266 according to the characteristics of the simulated execution platform. The
267 description of this target platform is given as an input for the execution, by
268 the mean of an XML file. It describes the properties of the platform, such as
269 the computing nodes with their computing power, the interconnection links with
270 their bandwidth and latency, and the routing strategy. The simulated running
271 time of the application is computed according to these properties.
273 To compute the durations of the operations in the simulated world, and to take
274 into account resource sharing (e.g. bandwidth sharing between competing
275 communications), SimGrid uses a fluid model. This allows to run relatively fast
276 simulations, while still keeping accurate
277 results~\cite{bedaride:hal-00919507,tomacs13}. Moreover, depending on the
278 simulated application, SimGrid/SMPI allows to skip long lasting computations and
279 to only take their duration into account. When the real computations cannot be
280 skipped, but the results have no importance for the simulation results, there is
281 also the possibility to share dynamically allocated data structures between
282 several simulated processes, and thus to reduce the whole memory consumption.
283 These two techniques can help to run simulations at a very large scale.
285 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
286 \section{Simulation of the multisplitting method}
287 %Décrire le problème (algo) traité ainsi que le processus d'adaptation à SimGrid.
288 Let $Ax=b$ be a large sparse system of $n$ linear equations in $\mathbb{R}$, where $A$ is a sparse square and nonsingular matrix, $x$ is the solution vector and $b$ is the right-hand side vector. We use a multisplitting method based on the block Jacobi splitting to solve this linear system on a large scale platform composed of $L$ clusters of processors~\cite{o1985multi}. In this case, we apply a row-by-row splitting without overlapping
290 \left(\begin{array}{ccc}
291 A_{11} & \cdots & A_{1L} \\
292 \vdots & \ddots & \vdots\\
293 A_{L1} & \cdots & A_{LL}
296 \left(\begin{array}{c}
302 \left(\begin{array}{c}
308 in such a way that successive rows of matrix $A$ and both vectors $x$ and $b$
309 are assigned to one cluster, where for all $\ell,m\in\{1,\ldots,L\}$, $A_{\ell
310 m}$ is a rectangular block of $A$ of size $n_\ell\times n_m$, $X_\ell$ and
311 $B_\ell$ are sub-vectors of $x$ and $b$, respectively, of size $n_\ell$ each,
312 and $\sum_{\ell} n_\ell=\sum_{m} n_m=n$.
314 The multisplitting method proceeds by iteration to solve in parallel the linear system on $L$ clusters of processors, in such a way each sub-system
319 A_{\ell\ell}X_\ell = Y_\ell \text{, such that}\\
320 Y_\ell = B_\ell - \displaystyle\sum_{\substack{m=1\\ m\neq \ell}}^{L}A_{\ell m}X_m
324 is solved independently by a cluster and communications are required to update
325 the right-hand side sub-vector $Y_\ell$, such that the sub-vectors $X_m$
326 represent the data dependencies between the clusters. As each sub-system
327 (\ref{eq:4.1}) is solved in parallel by a cluster of processors, our
328 multisplitting method uses an iterative method as an inner solver which is
329 easier to parallelize and more scalable than a direct method. In this work, we
330 use the parallel algorithm of GMRES method~\cite{ref1} which is one of the most
331 used iterative method by many researchers.
334 %%% IEEE instructions forbid to use an algorithm environment here, use figure
336 \begin{algorithmic}[1]
337 \Input $A_\ell$ (sparse sub-matrix), $B_\ell$ (right-hand side sub-vector)
338 \Output $X_\ell$ (solution sub-vector)\medskip
340 \State Load $A_\ell$, $B_\ell$
341 \State Set the initial guess $x^0$
342 \For {$k=0,1,2,\ldots$ until the global convergence}
343 \State Restart outer iteration with $x^0=x^k$
344 \State Inner iteration: \Call{InnerSolver}{$x^0$, $k+1$}
345 \State\label{algo:01:send} Send shared elements of $X_\ell^{k+1}$ to neighboring clusters
346 \State\label{algo:01:recv} Receive shared elements in $\{X_m^{k+1}\}_{m\neq \ell}$
351 \Function {InnerSolver}{$x^0$, $k$}
352 \State Compute local right-hand side $Y_\ell$:
354 Y_\ell = B_\ell - \sum\nolimits^L_{\substack{m=1\\ m\neq \ell}}A_{\ell m}X_m^0
356 \State Solving sub-system $A_{\ell\ell}X_\ell^k=Y_\ell$ with the parallel GMRES method
357 \State \Return $X_\ell^k$
360 \caption{A multisplitting solver with GMRES method}
364 Algorithm on Figure~\ref{algo:01} shows the main key points of the
365 multisplitting method to solve a large sparse linear system. This algorithm is
366 based on an outer-inner iteration method where the parallel synchronous GMRES
367 method is used to solve the inner iteration. It is executed in parallel by each
368 cluster of processors. For all $\ell,m\in\{1,\ldots,L\}$, the matrices and
369 vectors with the subscript $\ell$ represent the local data for cluster $\ell$,
370 while $\{A_{\ell m}\}_{m\neq \ell}$ are off-diagonal matrices of sparse matrix
371 $A$ and $\{X_m\}_{m\neq \ell}$ contain vector elements of solution $x$ shared
372 with neighboring clusters. At every outer iteration $k$, asynchronous
373 communications are performed between processors of the local cluster and those
374 of distant clusters (lines~\ref{algo:01:send} and~\ref{algo:01:recv} in
375 Figure~\ref{algo:01}). The shared vector elements of the solution $x$ are
376 exchanged by message passing using MPI non-blocking communication routines.
380 \includegraphics[width=60mm,keepaspectratio]{clustering}
381 \caption{Example of three clusters of processors interconnected by a virtual unidirectional ring network.}
385 The global convergence of the asynchronous multisplitting solver is detected
386 when the clusters of processors have all converged locally. We implemented the
387 global convergence detection process as follows. On each cluster a master
388 processor is designated (for example the processor with rank 1) and masters of
389 all clusters are interconnected by a virtual unidirectional ring network (see
390 Figure~\ref{fig:4.1}). During the resolution, a Boolean token circulates around
391 the virtual ring from a master processor to another until the global convergence
392 is achieved. So starting from the cluster with rank 1, each master processor $i$
393 sets the token to \textit{True} if the local convergence is achieved or to
394 \textit{False} otherwise, and sends it to master processor $i+1$. Finally, the
395 global convergence is detected when the master of cluster 1 receives from the
396 master of cluster $L$ a token set to \textit{True}. In this case, the master of
397 cluster 1 broadcasts a stop message to masters of other clusters. In this work,
398 the local convergence on each cluster $\ell$ is detected when the following
399 condition is satisfied
401 (k\leq \MI) \text{ or } (\|X_\ell^k - X_\ell^{k+1}\|_{\infty}\leq\epsilon)
403 where $\MI$ is the maximum number of outer iterations and $\epsilon$ is the
404 tolerance threshold of the error computed between two successive local solution
405 $X_\ell^k$ and $X_\ell^{k+1}$.
409 In this paper, we solve the 3D Poisson problem whose the mathematical model is
413 \nabla^2 u = f \text{~in~} \Omega \\
414 u =0 \text{~on~} \Gamma =\partial\Omega
419 where $\nabla^2$ is the Laplace operator, $f$ and $u$ are real-valued functions, and $\Omega=[0,1]^3$. The spatial discretization with a finite difference scheme reduces problem~(\ref{eq:02}) to a system of sparse linear equations. The general iteration scheme of our multisplitting method in a 3D domain using a seven point stencil could be written as
422 u^{k+1}(x,y,z)= & u^k(x,y,z) - \frac{1}{6}\times\\
423 & (u^k(x-1,y,z) + u^k(x+1,y,z) + \\
424 & u^k(x,y-1,z) + u^k(x,y+1,z) + \\
425 & u^k(x,y,z-1) + u^k(x,y,z+1)),
429 where the iteration matrix $A$ of size $N_x\times N_y\times N_z$ of the discretized linear system is sparse, symmetric and positive definite.
431 The parallel solving of the 3D Poisson problem with our multisplitting method requires a data partitioning of the problem between clusters and between processors within a cluster. We have chosen the 3D partitioning instead of the row-by-row partitioning in order to reduce the data exchanges at sub-domain boundaries. Figure~\ref{fig:4.2} shows an example of the data partitioning of the 3D Poisson problem between two clusters of processors, where each sub-problem is assigned to a processor. In this context, a processor has at most six neighbors within a cluster or in distant clusters with which it shares data at sub-domain boundaries.
435 \includegraphics[width=80mm,keepaspectratio]{partition}
436 \caption{Example of the 3D data partitioning between two clusters of processors.}
443 %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
444 We did not encounter major blocking problems when adapting the multisplitting algorithm previously described to a simulation environment like SimGrid unless some code
445 debugging. Indeed, apart from the review of the program sequence for asynchronous exchanges between processors within a cluster or between clusters, the algorithm was executed successfully with SMPI and provided identical outputs as those obtained with direct execution under MPI. In synchronous
446 mode, the execution of the program raised no particular issue but in asynchronous mode, the review of the sequence of MPI\_Isend, MPI\_Irecv and MPI\_Waitall instructions
447 and with the addition of the primitive MPI\_Test was needed to avoid a memory fault due to an infinite loop resulting from the non-convergence of the algorithm.
448 \CER{On voulait en fait montrer la simplicité de l'adaptation de l'algo a SimGrid. Les problèmes rencontrés décrits dans ce paragraphe concerne surtout le mode async}\LZK{OK. J'aurais préféré avoir un peu plus de détails sur l'adaptation de la version async}
449 \CER{Le problème majeur sur l'adaptation MPI vers SMPI pour la partie asynchrone de l'algorithme a été le plantage en SMPI de Waitall après un Isend et Irecv. J'avais proposé un workaround en utilisant un MPI\_wait séparé pour chaque échange a la place d'un waitall unique pour TOUTES les échanges, une instruction qui semble bien fonctionner en MPI. Ce workaround aussi fonctionne bien. Mais après, tu as modifié le programme avec l'ajout d'un MPI\_Test, au niveau de la routine de détection de la convergence et du coup, l'échange global avec waitall a aussi fonctionné.}
450 Note here that the use of SMPI functions optimizer for memory footprint and CPU usage is not recommended knowing that one wants to get real results by simulation.
451 As mentioned, upon this adaptation, the algorithm is executed as in the real life in the simulated environment after the following minor changes. First, the scope of all declared
452 global variables have been moved to local to subroutine. Indeed, global variables generate side effects arising from the concurrent access of
453 shared memory used by threads simulating each computing unit in the SimGrid architecture.
454 Second, some compilation errors on MPI\_Waitall and MPI\_Finalize primitives have been fixed with the latest version of SimGrid.
455 In total, the initial MPI program running on the simulation environment SMPI gave after a very simple adaptation the same results as those obtained in a real
456 environment. We have successfully executed the code in synchronous mode using parallel GMRES algorithm compared with our multisplitting algorithm in asynchronous mode after few modifications.
460 \section{Simulation results}
462 When the \textit{real} application runs in the simulation environment and produces the expected results, varying the input
463 parameters and the program arguments allows us to compare outputs from the code execution. We have noticed from this
464 study that the results depend on the following parameters:
466 \item At the network level, we found that the most critical values are the
467 bandwidth and the network latency.
468 \item Hosts processors power (GFlops) can also influence on the results.
469 \item Finally, when submitting job batches for execution, the arguments values
470 passed to the program like the maximum number of iterations or the precision are critical. They allow us to ensure not only the convergence of the
471 algorithm but also to get the main objective in getting an execution time in asynchronous communication less than in
472 synchronous mode. The ratio between the execution time of synchronous
473 compared to the asynchronous mode ($t_\text{sync} / t_\text{async}$) is defined as the \emph{relative gain}. So,
474 our objective running the algorithm in SimGrid is to obtain a relative gain
478 A priori, obtaining a relative gain greater than 1 would be difficult in a local
479 area network configuration where the synchronous mode will take advantage on the
480 rapid exchange of information on such high-speed links. Thus, the methodology
481 adopted was to launch the application on a clustered network. In this
482 configuration, degrading the inter-cluster network performance will penalize the
483 synchronous mode allowing to get a relative gain greater than 1. This action
484 simulates the case of distant clusters linked with long distance network as in grid computing context.
488 The algorithm was run on a two clusters based network with 50 hosts each, totaling 100 hosts. Various combinations of the above
489 factors have provided the results shown in Table~\ref{tab.cluster.2x50}. The algorithm convergence with a 3D
490 matrix size ranging from $N_x = N_y = N_z = \text{62}$ to 150 elements (that is from
491 $\text{62}^\text{3} = \text{\np{238328}}$ to $\text{150}^\text{3} =
492 \text{\np{3375000}}$ entries), is obtained in asynchronous in average 2.5 times speeder than the synchronous mode.
493 \AG{Expliquer comment lire les tableaux.}
494 \CER{J'ai reformulé la phrase par la lecture du tableau. Plus de détails seront lus dans la partie Interprétations et commentaires}
495 % use the same column width for the following three tables
496 \newlength{\mytablew}\settowidth{\mytablew}{\footnotesize\np{E-11}}
497 \newenvironment{mytable}[1]{% #1: number of columns for data
498 \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.3}%
499 \begin{tabular}{|>{\bfseries}r%
500 |*{#1}{>{\centering\arraybackslash}p{\mytablew}|}}}{%
505 \caption{2 clusters, each with 50 nodes}
506 \label{tab.cluster.2x50}
511 & 5 & 5 & 5 & 5 & 5 \\
514 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 \\
517 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1.5 & 1.5 \\
520 & 62 & 62 & 62 & 100 & 100 \\
523 & \np{E-5} & \np{E-8} & \np{E-9} & \np{E-11} & \np{E-11} \\
527 & 2.52 & 2.55 & 2.52 & 2.57 & 2.54 \\
536 & 50 & 50 & 50 & 50 & 50 \\ % & 10 & 10 \\
539 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 \\ % & 0.03 & 0.01 \\
542 & 1.5 & 1.5 & 1.5 & 1.5 & 1.5 \\ % & 1 & 1.5 \\
545 & 110 & 120 & 130 & 140 & 150 \\ % & 171 & 171 \\
548 & \np{E-11} & \np{E-11} & \np{E-11} & \np{E-11} & \np{E-11} \\ % & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} \\
552 & 2.53 & 2.51 & 2.58 & 2.55 & 2.54 \\ % & 1.59 & 1.29 \\
557 %Then we have changed the network configuration using three clusters containing
558 %respectively 33, 33 and 34 hosts, or again by on hundred hosts for all the
559 %clusters. In the same way as above, a judicious choice of key parameters has
560 %permitted to get the results in Table~\ref{tab.cluster.3x33} which shows the
561 %relative gains greater than 1 with a matrix size from 62 to 100 elements.
563 \CER{En accord avec RC, on a pour le moment enlevé les tableaux 2 et 3 sachant que les résultats obtenus sont limites. De même, on a enlevé aussi les deux dernières colonnes du tableau I en attendant une meilleure performance et une meilleure precision}
566 % \caption{3 clusters, each with 33 nodes}
567 % \label{tab.cluster.3x33}
572 % & 10 & 5 & 4 & 3 & 2 & 6 \\
575 % & 0.01 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 & 0.02 \\
578 % & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \\
581 % & 62 & 100 & 100 & 100 & 100 & 171 \\
584 % & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} & \np{E-5} \\
588 % & 1.003 & 1.01 & 1.08 & 1.19 & 1.28 & 1.01 \\
593 %In a final step, results of an execution attempt to scale up the three clustered
594 %configuration but increasing by two hundreds hosts has been recorded in
595 %Table~\ref{tab.cluster.3x67}.
599 % \caption{3 clusters, each with 66 nodes}
600 % \label{tab.cluster.3x67}
612 % Prec/Eprec & \np{E-5} \\
615 % Relative gain & 1.11 \\
620 Note that the program was run with the following parameters:
622 \paragraph*{SMPI parameters}
625 \item HOSTFILE: Text file containing the list of the processors units name. Here 100 hosts;
626 \item PLATFORM: XML file description of the platform architecture : two clusters (cluster1 and cluster2) with the following characteristics :
628 \item Processor unit power: \np[GFlops]{1.5};
629 \item Intracluster network bandwidth: \np[Gbit/s]{1.25} and latency:
631 \item Intercluster network bandwidth: \np[Mbit/s]{5} and latency:
637 \paragraph*{Arguments of the program}
640 \item Description of the cluster architecture matching the format <Number of cluster> <Number of hosts in cluster\_1> <Number of hosts in cluster\_2>;
641 \item Maximum number of iterations;
642 \item Precisions on the residual error;
643 \item Matrix size $N_x$, $N_y$ and $N_z$;
644 \item Matrix diagonal value: \np{1.0} (See (3));
645 \item Matrix off-diagonal value: $-\frac{1}{6}$ (See(3));
646 \item Communication mode: Asynchronous.
649 \paragraph*{Interpretations and comments}
651 After analyzing the outputs, generally, for the two clusters including one hundred hosts configuration (Tables~\ref{tab.cluster.2x50}), some combinations of parameters affecting
652 the results have given a relative gain more than 2.5, showing the effectiveness of the
653 asynchronous performance compared to the synchronous mode.
655 With these settings, Table~\ref{tab.cluster.2x50} shows
656 that after a deterioration of inter cluster network with a bandwidth of \np[Mbit/s]{5} and a latency in order of one hundredth of millisecond and a processor power
657 of one GFlops, an efficiency of about \np[\%]{40} is
658 obtained in asynchronous mode for a matrix size of 62 elements. It is noticed that the result remains
659 stable even we vary the residual error precision from \np{E-5} to \np{E-9}. By
660 increasing the matrix size up to 100 elements, it was necessary to increase the
661 CPU power of \np[\%]{50} to \np[GFlops]{1.5} to get the algorithm convergence and the same order of asynchronous mode efficiency. Maintaining such processor power but increasing network throughput inter cluster up to
662 \np[Mbit/s]{50}, the result of efficiency with a relative gain of 2.5 is obtained with
663 high external precision of \np{E-11} for a matrix size from 110 to 150 side
666 %For the 3 clusters architecture including a total of 100 hosts,
667 %Table~\ref{tab.cluster.3x33} shows that it was difficult to have a combination
668 %which gives a relative gain of asynchronous mode more than 1.2. Indeed, for a
669 %matrix size of 62 elements, equality between the performance of the two modes
670 %(synchronous and asynchronous) is achieved with an inter cluster of
671 %\np[Mbit/s]{10} and a latency of \np[ms]{E-1}. To challenge an efficiency greater than 1.2 with a matrix %size of 100 points, it was necessary to degrade the
672 %inter cluster network bandwidth from 5 to \np[Mbit/s]{2}.
673 \AG{Conclusion, on prend une plateforme pourrie pour avoir un bon ratio sync/async ???
674 Quelle est la perte de perfs en faisant ça ?}
676 %A last attempt was made for a configuration of three clusters but more powerful
677 %with 200 nodes in total. The convergence with a relative gain around 1.1 was
678 %obtained with a bandwidth of \np[Mbit/s]{1} as shown in
679 %Table~\ref{tab.cluster.3x67}.
681 \RC{Est ce qu'on sait expliquer pourquoi il y a une telle différence entre les résultats avec 2 et 3 clusters... Avec 3 clusters, ils sont pas très bons... Je me demande s'il ne faut pas les enlever...}
682 \RC{En fait je pense avoir la réponse à ma remarque... On voit avec les 2 clusters que le gain est d'autant plus grand qu'on choisit une bonne précision. Donc, plusieurs solutions, lancer rapidement un long test pour confirmer ca, ou enlever des tests... ou on ne change rien :-)}
683 \LZK{Ma question est: le bandwidth et latency sont ceux inter-clusters ou pour les deux inter et intra cluster??}
684 \CER{Définitivement, les paramètres réseaux variables ici se rapportent au réseau INTER cluster.}
686 The experimental results on executing a parallel iterative algorithm in
687 asynchronous mode on an environment simulating a large scale of virtual
688 computers organized with interconnected clusters have been presented.
689 Our work has demonstrated that using such a simulation tool allow us to
690 reach the following three objectives:
693 \item To have a flexible configurable execution platform resolving the
694 hard exercise to access to very limited but so solicited physical
696 \item to ensure the algorithm convergence with a reasonable time and
698 \item and finally and more importantly, to find the correct combination
699 of the cluster and network specifications permitting to save time in
700 executing the algorithm in asynchronous mode.
702 Our results have shown that in certain conditions, asynchronous mode is
703 speeder up to \np[\%]{40} than executing the algorithm in synchronous mode
704 which is not negligible for solving complex practical problems with more
705 and more increasing size.
707 Several studies have already addressed the performance execution time of
708 this class of algorithm. The work presented in this paper has
709 demonstrated an original solution to optimize the use of a simulation
710 tool to run efficiently an iterative parallel algorithm in asynchronous
711 mode in a grid architecture.
713 \LZK{Perspectives???}
715 \section*{Acknowledgment}
717 This work is partially funded by the Labex ACTION program (contract ANR-11-LABX-01-01).
718 \todo[inline]{The authors would like to thank\dots{}}
720 % trigger a \newpage just before the given reference
721 % number - used to balance the columns on the last page
722 % adjust value as needed - may need to be readjusted if
723 % the document is modified later
724 \bibliographystyle{IEEEtran}
725 \bibliography{IEEEabrv,hpccBib}
735 %%% ispell-local-dictionary: "american"
738 % LocalWords: Ramamonjisoa Laiymani Arnaud Giersch Ziane Khodja Raphaël Femto
739 % LocalWords: Université Franche Comté IUT Montbéliard Maréchal Juin Inria Sud
740 % LocalWords: Ouest Vieille Talence cedex scalability experimentations HPC MPI
741 % LocalWords: Parallelization AIAC GMRES multi SMPI SISC SIAC SimDAG DAGs Lua
742 % LocalWords: Fortran GFlops priori Mbit de du fcomte multisplitting scalable
743 % LocalWords: SimGrid Belfort parallelize Labex ANR LABX IEEEabrv hpccBib
744 % LocalWords: intra durations nonsingular Waitall discretization discretized
745 % LocalWords: InnerSolver Isend Irecv