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56 \title{Energy Consumption Reduction for Message Passing Iterative Applications in Heterogeneous Architecture Using DVFS}
67 University of Franche-Comté\\
68 IUT de Belfort-Montbéliard,
69 19 avenue du Maréchal Juin, BP 527, 90016 Belfort cedex, France\\
70 % Telephone: \mbox{+33 3 84 58 77 86}, % Raphaël
71 % Fax: \mbox{+33 3 84 58 77 81}\\ % Dept Info
72 Email: \email{{jean-claude.charr,raphael.couturier,ahmed.fanfakh_badri_muslim,arnaud.giersch}@univ-fcomte.fr}
79 Computing platforms are consuming more and more energy due to the increase of the number of nodes composing them.
80 To minimize the operating costs of these platforms many techniques have been used. Dynamic voltage and frequency
81 scaling (DVFS) is one of them, it reduces the frequency of a CPU to lower its energy consumption. However,
82 lowering the frequency of a CPU might increase the execution time of an application running on that processor.
83 Therefore, the frequency that gives the best tradeoff between the energy consumption and the performance of an
84 application must be selected.
86 In this paper, a new online frequencies selecting algorithm for heterogeneous platforms is presented.
87 It selects the frequency that try to give the best tradeoff between energy saving and performance degradation,
88 for each node computing the message passing iterative application. The algorithm has a small overhead and
89 works without training or profiling. It uses a new energy model for message passing iterative applications
90 running on a heterogeneous platform. The proposed algorithm is evaluated on the Simgrid simulator while
91 running the NAS parallel benchmarks. The experiments demonstrated that it reduces the energy consumption
92 up to 35\% while limiting the performance degradation as much as possible. \textcolor{red}{Furthermore, we compare the
93 proposed algorithm with other method. The comparison results show that our algorithm gives better
94 energy-time trade-off.}
98 \section{Introduction}
100 The need for more computing power is continually increasing. To partially satisfy this need, most supercomputers
101 constructors just put more computing nodes in their platform. The resulting platform might achieve higher floating
102 point operations per second (FLOPS), but the energy consumption and the heat dissipation are also increased.
103 As an example, the Chinese supercomputer Tianhe-2 had the highest FLOPS in November 2014 according to the Top500
104 list \cite{TOP500_Supercomputers_Sites}. However, it was also the most power hungry platform with its over 3 millions
105 cores consuming around 17.8 megawatts. Moreover, according to the U.S. annual energy outlook 2014
106 \cite{U.S_Annual.Energy.Outlook.2014}, the price of energy for 1 megawatt-hour
107 was approximately equal to \$70.
108 Therefore, the price of the energy consumed by the
109 Tianhe-2 platform is approximately more than \$10 millions each year.
110 The computing platforms must be more energy efficient and offer the highest number of FLOPS per watt possible,
111 such as the L-CSC from the GSI Helmholtz Center which
112 became the top of the Green500 list in November 2014 \cite{Green500_List}.
113 This heterogeneous platform executes more than 5 GFLOPS per watt while consumed 57.15 kilowatts.
115 Besides hardware improvements, there are many software techniques to lower the energy consumption of these platforms,
116 such as scheduling, DVFS, ... DVFS is a widely used process to reduce the energy consumption of a processor by lowering
117 its frequency \cite{Rizvandi_Some.Observations.on.Optimal.Frequency}. However, it also reduces the number of FLOPS
118 executed by the processor which might increase the execution time of the application running over that processor.
119 Therefore, researchers used different optimization strategies to select the frequency that gives the best tradeoff
120 between the energy reduction and
121 performance degradation ratio. In \cite{Our_first_paper}, a frequency selecting algorithm
122 was proposed to reduce the energy consumption of message passing iterative applications running over homogeneous platforms. The results of the experiments showed significant energy consumption reductions. In this paper, a new frequency selecting algorithm adapted for heterogeneous platform is presented. It selects the vector of frequencies, for a heterogeneous platform running a message passing iterative application, that simultaneously tries to give the maximum energy reduction and minimum performance degradation ratio. The algorithm has a very small
123 overhead, works online and does not need any training or profiling.
125 This paper is organized as follows: Section~\ref{sec.relwork} presents some
126 related works from other authors. Section~\ref{sec.exe} describes how the
127 execution time of message passing programs can be predicted. It also presents an energy
128 model that predicts the energy consumption of an application running over a heterogeneous platform. Section~\ref{sec.compet} presents
129 the energy-performance objective function that maximizes the reduction of energy
130 consumption while minimizing the degradation of the program's performance.
131 Section~\ref{sec.optim} details the proposed frequency selecting algorithm then the precision of the proposed algorithm is verified.
132 Section~\ref{sec.expe} presents the results of applying the algorithm on the NAS parallel benchmarks and executing them
133 on a heterogeneous platform. It shows the results of running three
134 different power scenarios and comparing them. \textcolor{red}{Moreover, it also shows the comparison results
135 between our method and other method.}
136 Finally, in Section~\ref{sec.concl} the paper is ended with a summary and some future works.
138 \section{Related works}
140 DVFS is a technique enabled
141 in modern processors to scale down both the voltage and the frequency of
142 the CPU while computing, in order to reduce the energy consumption of the processor. DVFS is
143 also allowed in the GPUs to achieve the same goal. Reducing the frequency of a processor lowers its number of FLOPS and might degrade the performance of the application running on that processor, especially if it is compute bound. Therefore selecting the appropriate frequency for a processor to satisfy some objectives and while taking into account all the constraints, is not a trivial operation. Many researchers used different strategies to tackle this problem. Some of them developed online methods that compute the new frequency while executing the application, such as ~\cite{Hao_Learning.based.DVFS,Dhiman_Online.Learning.Power.Management}. Others used offline methods that might need to run the application and profile it before selecting the new frequency, such as ~\cite{Rountree_Bounding.energy.consumption.in.MPI,Cochran_Pack_and_Cap_Adaptive_DVFS}. The methods could be heuristics, exact or brute force methods that satisfy varied objectives such as energy reduction or performance. They also could be adapted to the execution's environment and the type of the application such as sequential, parallel or distributed architecture, homogeneous or heterogeneous platform, synchronous or asynchronous application, ...
145 In this paper, we are interested in reducing energy for message passing iterative synchronous applications running over heterogeneous platforms.
146 Some works have already been done for such platforms and they can be classified into two types of heterogeneous platforms:
149 \item the platform is composed of homogeneous GPUs and homogeneous CPUs.
150 \item the platform is only composed of heterogeneous CPUs.
154 For the first type of platform, the compute intensive parallel tasks are executed on the GPUs and the rest are executed
155 on the CPUs. Luley et al.
156 ~\cite{Luley_Energy.efficiency.evaluation.and.benchmarking}, proposed a heterogeneous
157 cluster composed of Intel Xeon CPUs and NVIDIA GPUs. Their main goal was to maximize the
158 energy efficiency of the platform during computation by maximizing the number of FLOPS per watt generated.
159 In~\cite{KaiMa_Holistic.Approach.to.Energy.Efficiency.in.GPU-CPU}, Kai Ma et al. developed a scheduling
160 algorithm that distributes workloads proportional to the computing power of the nodes which could be a GPU or a CPU. All the tasks must be completed at the same time.
161 In~\cite{Rong_Effects.of.DVFS.on.K20.GPU}, Rong et al. showed that
162 a heterogeneous (GPUs and CPUs) cluster that enables DVFS gave better energy and performance
163 efficiency than other clusters only composed of CPUs.
165 The work presented in this paper concerns the second type of platform, with heterogeneous CPUs.
166 Many methods were conceived to reduce the energy consumption of this type of platform. Naveen et al.~\cite{Naveen_Power.Efficient.Resource.Scaling}
167 developed a method that minimizes the value of $energy*delay^2$ (the delay is the sum of slack times that happen during synchronous communications) by dynamically assigning new frequencies to the CPUs of the heterogeneous cluster. Lizhe et al.~\cite{Lizhe_Energy.aware.parallel.task.scheduling} proposed
168 an algorithm that divides the executed tasks into two types: the critical and
169 non critical tasks. The algorithm scales down the frequency of non critical tasks proportionally to their slack and communication times while limiting the performance degradation percentage to less than 10\%. In~\cite{Joshi_Blackbox.prediction.of.impact.of.DVFS}, they developed
170 a heterogeneous cluster composed of two types
171 of Intel and AMD processors. They use a gradient method to predict the impact of DVFS operations on performance.
172 In~\cite{Shelepov_Scheduling.on.Heterogeneous.Multicore} and \cite{Li_Minimizing.Energy.Consumption.for.Frame.Based.Tasks},
173 the best frequencies for a specified heterogeneous cluster are selected offline using some
174 heuristic. Chen et al.~\cite{Chen_DVFS.under.quality.of.service.requirements} used a greedy dynamic programming approach to
175 minimize the power consumption of heterogeneous severs while respecting given time constraints. This approach
176 had considerable overhead.
177 In contrast to the above described papers, this paper presents the following contributions :
179 \item two new energy and performance models for message passing iterative synchronous applications running over
180 a heterogeneous platform. Both models takes into account the communication and slack times. The models can predict the required energy and the execution time of the application.
182 \item a new online frequency selecting algorithm for heterogeneous platforms. The algorithm has a very small
183 overhead and does not need for any training or profiling. It uses a new optimization function which simultaneously maximizes the performance and minimizes the energy consumption of a message passing iterative synchronous application.
187 \section{The performance and energy consumption measurements on heterogeneous architecture}
192 \subsection{The execution time of message passing distributed
193 iterative applications on a heterogeneous platform}
195 In this paper, we are interested in reducing the energy consumption of message
196 passing distributed iterative synchronous applications running over
197 heterogeneous platforms. A heterogeneous platform is defined as a collection of
198 heterogeneous computing nodes interconnected via a high speed homogeneous
199 network. Therefore, each node has different characteristics such as computing
200 power (FLOPS), energy consumption, CPU's frequency range, \dots{} but they all
201 have the same network bandwidth and latency.
203 The overall execution time of a distributed iterative synchronous application
204 over a heterogeneous platform consists of the sum of the computation time and
205 the communication time for every iteration on a node. However, due to the
206 heterogeneous computation power of the computing nodes, slack times might occur
207 when fast nodes have to wait, during synchronous communications, for the slower
208 nodes to finish their computations (see Figure~(\ref{fig:heter})).
209 Therefore, the overall execution time of the program is the execution time of the slowest
210 task which have the highest computation time and no slack time.
214 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{fig/commtasks}
215 \caption{Parallel tasks on a heterogeneous platform}
219 Dynamic Voltage and Frequency Scaling (DVFS) is a process, implemented in
220 modern processors, that reduces the energy consumption of a CPU by scaling
221 down its voltage and frequency. Since DVFS lowers the frequency of a CPU
222 and consequently its computing power, the execution time of a program running
223 over that scaled down processor might increase, especially if the program is
224 compute bound. The frequency reduction process can be expressed by the scaling
225 factor S which is the ratio between the maximum and the new frequency of a CPU
229 S = \frac{F_\textit{max}}{F_\textit{new}}
231 The execution time of a compute bound sequential program is linearly proportional
232 to the frequency scaling factor $S$. On the other hand, message passing
233 distributed applications consist of two parts: computation and communication.
234 The execution time of the computation part is linearly proportional to the
235 frequency scaling factor $S$ but the communication time is not affected by the
236 scaling factor because the processors involved remain idle during the
237 communications~\cite{Freeh_Exploring.the.Energy.Time.Tradeoff}.
238 The communication time for a task is the summation of periods of
239 time that begin with an MPI call for sending or receiving a message
240 until the message is synchronously sent or received.
242 Since in a heterogeneous platform, each node has different characteristics,
243 especially different frequency gears, when applying DVFS operations on these
244 nodes, they may get different scaling factors represented by a scaling vector:
245 $(S_1, S_2,\dots, S_N)$ where $S_i$ is the scaling factor of processor $i$. To
246 be able to predict the execution time of message passing synchronous iterative
247 applications running over a heterogeneous platform, for different vectors of
248 scaling factors, the communication time and the computation time for all the
249 tasks must be measured during the first iteration before applying any DVFS
250 operation. Then the execution time for one iteration of the application with any
251 vector of scaling factors can be predicted using (\ref{eq:perf}).
254 \textit T_\textit{new} =
255 \max_{i=1,2,\dots,N} ({TcpOld_{i}} \cdot S_{i}) + MinTcm
260 MinTcm = \min_{i=1,2,\dots,N} (Tcm_i)
262 where $TcpOld_i$ is the computation time of processor $i$ during the first
263 iteration and $MinTcm$ is the communication time of the slowest processor from
264 the first iteration. The model computes the maximum computation time
265 with scaling factor from each node added to the communication time of the
266 slowest node, it means only the communication time without any slack time.
267 Therefore, the execution time of the iterative application is
268 equal to the execution time of one iteration as in (\ref{eq:perf}) multiplied
269 by the number of iterations of that application.
271 This prediction model is developed from the model for predicting the execution time of
272 message passing distributed applications for homogeneous architectures~\cite{Our_first_paper}.
273 The execution time prediction model is uSpiliopoulossed in the method for optimizing both
274 energy consumption and performance of iterative methods, which is presented in the
278 \subsection{Energy model for heterogeneous platform}
279 Many researchers~\cite{Malkowski_energy.efficient.high.performance.computing,
280 Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy,Zhuo_Energy.efficient.Dynamic.Task.Scheduling,
281 Rizvandi_Some.Observations.on.Optimal.Frequency} divide the power consumed by a processor into
282 two power metrics: the static and the dynamic power. While the first one is
283 consumed as long as the computing unit is turned on, the latter is only consumed during
284 computation times. The dynamic power $Pd$ is related to the switching
285 activity $\alpha$, load capacitance $C_L$, the supply voltage $V$ and
286 operational frequency $F$, as shown in (\ref{eq:pd}).
289 Pd = \alpha \cdot C_L \cdot V^2 \cdot F
291 The static power $Ps$ captures the leakage power as follows:
294 Ps = V \cdot N_{trans} \cdot K_{design} \cdot I_{leak}
296 where V is the supply voltage, $N_{trans}$ is the number of transistors,
297 $K_{design}$ is a design dependent parameter and $I_{leak}$ is a
298 technology-dependent parameter. The energy consumed by an individual processor
299 to execute a given program can be computed as:
302 E_\textit{ind} = Pd \cdot Tcp + Ps \cdot T
304 where $T$ is the execution time of the program, $Tcp$ is the computation
305 time and $Tcp \le T$. $Tcp$ may be equal to $T$ if there is no
306 communication and no slack time.
308 The main objective of DVFS operation is to reduce the overall energy consumption~\cite{Le_DVFS.Laws.of.Diminishing.Returns}.
309 The operational frequency $F$ depends linearly on the supply voltage $V$, i.e., $V = \beta \cdot F$ with some
310 constant $\beta$.~This equation is used to study the change of the dynamic
311 voltage with respect to various frequency values in~\cite{Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy}. The reduction
312 process of the frequency can be expressed by the scaling factor $S$ which is the
313 ratio between the maximum and the new frequency as in (\ref{eq:s}).
314 The CPU governors are power schemes supplied by the operating
315 system's kernel to lower a core's frequency. The new frequency
316 $F_{new}$ from (\ref{eq:s}) can be calculated as follows:
319 F_\textit{new} = S^{-1} \cdot F_\textit{max}
321 Replacing $F_{new}$ in (\ref{eq:pd}) as in (\ref{eq:fnew}) gives the following
322 equation for dynamic power consumption:
325 {P}_\textit{dNew} = \alpha \cdot C_L \cdot V^2 \cdot F_{new} = \alpha \cdot C_L \cdot \beta^2 \cdot F_{new}^3 \\
326 {} = \alpha \cdot C_L \cdot V^2 \cdot F_{max} \cdot S^{-3} = P_{dOld} \cdot S^{-3}
328 where $ {P}_\textit{dNew}$ and $P_{dOld}$ are the dynamic power consumed with the
329 new frequency and the maximum frequency respectively.
331 According to (\ref{eq:pdnew}) the dynamic power is reduced by a factor of $S^{-3}$ when
332 reducing the frequency by a factor of $S$~\cite{Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy}. Since the FLOPS of a CPU is proportional
333 to the frequency of a CPU, the computation time is increased proportionally to $S$.
334 The new dynamic energy is the dynamic power multiplied by the new time of computation
335 and is given by the following equation:
338 E_\textit{dNew} = P_{dOld} \cdot S^{-3} \cdot (Tcp \cdot S)= S^{-2}\cdot P_{dOld} \cdot Tcp
340 The static power is related to the power leakage of the CPU and is consumed during computation
341 and even when idle. As in~\cite{Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy,Zhuo_Energy.efficient.Dynamic.Task.Scheduling},
342 the static power of a processor is considered as constant
343 during idle and computation periods, and for all its available frequencies.
344 The static energy is the static power multiplied by the execution time of the program.
345 According to the execution time model in (\ref{eq:perf}), the execution time of the program
346 is the summation of the computation and the communication times. The computation time is linearly related
347 to the frequency scaling factor, while this scaling factor does not affect the communication time.
348 The static energy of a processor after scaling its frequency is computed as follows:
351 E_\textit{s} = Ps \cdot (Tcp \cdot S + Tcm)
354 In the considered heterogeneous platform, each processor $i$ might have different dynamic and
355 static powers, noted as $Pd_{i}$ and $Ps_{i}$ respectively. Therefore, even if the distributed
356 message passing iterative application is load balanced, the computation time of each CPU $i$
357 noted $Tcp_{i}$ might be different and different frequency scaling factors might be computed
358 in order to decrease the overall energy consumption of the application and reduce the slack times.
359 The communication time of a processor $i$ is noted as $Tcm_{i}$ and could contain slack times
360 if it is communicating with slower nodes, see figure(\ref{fig:heter}). Therefore, all nodes do
361 not have equal communication times. While the dynamic energy is computed according to the frequency
362 scaling factor and the dynamic power of each node as in (\ref{eq:Edyn}), the static energy is
363 computed as the sum of the execution time of each processor multiplied by its static power.
364 The overall energy consumption of a message passing distributed application executed over a
365 heterogeneous platform during one iteration is the summation of all dynamic and static energies
366 for each processor. It is computed as follows:
369 E = \sum_{i=1}^{N} {(S_i^{-2} \cdot Pd_{i} \cdot Tcp_i)} + {} \\
370 \sum_{i=1}^{N} (Ps_{i} \cdot (\max_{i=1,2,\dots,N} (Tcp_i \cdot S_{i}) +
374 Reducing the frequencies of the processors according to the vector of
375 scaling factors $(S_1, S_2,\dots, S_N)$ may degrade the performance of the
376 application and thus, increase the static energy because the execution time is
377 increased~\cite{Kim_Leakage.Current.Moore.Law}. The overall energy consumption for the iterative
378 application can be measured by measuring the energy consumption for one iteration as in (\ref{eq:energy})
379 multiplied by the number of iterations of that application.
382 \section{Optimization of both energy consumption and performance}
385 Using the lowest frequency for each processor does not necessarily gives the most energy
386 efficient execution of an application. Indeed, even though the dynamic power is reduced
387 while scaling down the frequency of a processor, its computation power is proportionally
388 decreased and thus the execution time might be drastically increased during which dynamic
389 and static powers are being consumed. Therefore, it might cancel any gains achieved by
390 scaling down the frequency of all nodes to the minimum and the overall energy consumption
391 of the application might not be the optimal one. It is not trivial to select the appropriate
392 frequency scaling factor for each processor while considering the characteristics of each processor
393 (computation power, range of frequencies, dynamic and static powers) and the task executed
394 (computation/communication ratio) in order to reduce the overall energy consumption and not
395 significantly increase the execution time. In our previous work~\cite{Our_first_paper}, we proposed a method
396 that selects the optimal frequency scaling factor for a homogeneous cluster executing a message
397 passing iterative synchronous application while giving the best trade-off between the energy
398 consumption and the performance for such applications. In this work we are interested in
399 heterogeneous clusters as described above. Due to the heterogeneity of the processors, not
400 one but a vector of scaling factors should be selected and it must give the best trade-off
401 between energy consumption and performance.
403 The relation between the energy consumption and the execution time for an application is
404 complex and nonlinear, Thus, unlike the relation between the execution time
405 and the scaling factor, the relation of the energy with the frequency scaling
406 factors is nonlinear, for more details refer to~\cite{Freeh_Exploring.the.Energy.Time.Tradeoff}.
407 Moreover, they are not measured using the same metric. To solve this problem, the
408 execution time is normalized by computing the ratio between the new execution time (after
409 scaling down the frequencies of some processors) and the initial one (with maximum
410 frequency for all nodes) as follows:
413 P_\textit{Norm} = \frac{T_\textit{New}}{T_\textit{Old}}\\
414 {} = \frac{ \max_{i=1,2,\dots,N} (Tcp_{i} \cdot S_{i}) +MinTcm}
415 {\max_{i=1,2,\dots,N}{(Tcp_i+Tcm_i)}}
419 In the same way, the energy is normalized by computing the ratio between the consumed energy
420 while scaling down the frequency and the consumed energy with maximum frequency for all nodes:
423 E_\textit{Norm} = \frac{E_\textit{Reduced}}{E_\textit{Original}} \\
424 {} = \frac{ \sum_{i=1}^{N}{(S_i^{-2} \cdot Pd_i \cdot Tcp_i)} +
425 \sum_{i=1}^{N} {(Ps_i \cdot T_{New})}}{\sum_{i=1}^{N}{( Pd_i \cdot Tcp_i)} +
426 \sum_{i=1}^{N} {(Ps_i \cdot T_{Old})}}
428 Where $E_\textit{Reduced}$ and $E_\textit{Original}$ are computed using (\ref{eq:energy}) and
429 $T_{New}$ and $T_{Old}$ are computed as in (\ref{eq:pnorm}).
432 goal is to optimize the energy and execution time at the same time, the normalized
433 energy and execution time curves are not in the same direction. According
434 to the equations~(\ref{eq:pnorm}) and (\ref{eq:enorm}), the vector of frequency
435 scaling factors $S_1,S_2,\dots,S_N$ reduce both the energy and the execution
436 time simultaneously. But the main objective is to produce maximum energy
437 reduction with minimum execution time reduction.
439 This problem can be solved by making the optimization process for energy and
440 execution time follow the same direction. Therefore, the equation of the
441 normalized execution time is inverted which gives the normalized performance equation, as follows:
444 P_\textit{Norm} = \frac{T_\textit{Old}}{T_\textit{New}}\\
445 = \frac{\max_{i=1,2,\dots,N}{(Tcp_i+Tcm_i)}}
446 { \max_{i=1,2,\dots,N} (Tcp_{i} \cdot S_{i}) + MinTcm}
452 \subfloat[Homogeneous platform]{%
453 \includegraphics[width=.33\textwidth]{fig/homo}\label{fig:r1}}%
456 \subfloat[Heterogeneous platform]{%
457 \includegraphics[width=.33\textwidth]{fig/heter}\label{fig:r2}}
459 \caption{The energy and performance relation}
462 Then, the objective function can be modeled as finding the maximum distance
463 between the energy curve (\ref{eq:enorm}) and the performance
464 curve (\ref{eq:pnorm_inv}) over all available sets of scaling factors. This
465 represents the minimum energy consumption with minimum execution time (maximum
466 performance) at the same time, see figure~(\ref{fig:r1}) or figure~(\ref{fig:r2}). Then the objective
467 function has the following form:
471 \max_{i=1,\dots F, j=1,\dots,N}
472 (\overbrace{P_\textit{Norm}(S_{ij})}^{\text{Maximize}} -
473 \overbrace{E_\textit{Norm}(S_{ij})}^{\text{Minimize}} )
475 where $N$ is the number of nodes and $F$ is the number of available frequencies for each node.
476 Then, the optimal set of scaling factors that satisfies (\ref{eq:max}) can be selected.
477 The objective function can work with any energy model or any power values for each node
478 (static and dynamic powers). However, the most energy reduction gain can be achieved when
479 the energy curve has a convex form as shown in~\cite{Zhuo_Energy.efficient.Dynamic.Task.Scheduling,Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy,Hao_Learning.based.DVFS}.
481 \section{The scaling factors selection algorithm for heterogeneous platforms }
484 \subsection{The algorithm details}
485 In this section algorithm \ref{HSA} is presented. It selects the frequency scaling factors
486 vector that gives the best trade-off between minimizing the energy consumption and maximizing
487 the performance of a message passing synchronous iterative application executed on a heterogeneous
488 platform. It works online during the execution time of the iterative message passing program.
489 It uses information gathered during the first iteration such as the computation time and the
490 communication time in one iteration for each node. The algorithm is executed after the first
491 iteration and returns a vector of optimal frequency scaling factors that satisfies the objective
492 function (\ref{eq:max}). The program apply DVFS operations to change the frequencies of the CPUs
493 according to the computed scaling factors. This algorithm is called just once during the execution
494 of the program. Algorithm~(\ref{dvfs}) shows where and when the proposed scaling algorithm is called
495 in the iterative MPI program.
497 The nodes in a heterogeneous platform have different computing powers, thus while executing message
498 passing iterative synchronous applications, fast nodes have to wait for the slower ones to finish their
499 computations before being able to synchronously communicate with them as in figure (\ref{fig:heter}).
500 These periods are called idle or slack times.
501 The algorithm takes into account this problem and tries to reduce these slack times when selecting the
502 frequency scaling factors vector. At first, it selects initial frequency scaling factors that increase
503 the execution times of fast nodes and minimize the differences between the computation times of
504 fast and slow nodes. The value of the initial frequency scaling factor for each node is inversely
505 proportional to its computation time that was gathered from the first iteration. These initial frequency
506 scaling factors are computed as a ratio between the computation time of the slowest node and the
507 computation time of the node $i$ as follows:
510 Scp_{i} = \frac{\max_{i=1,2,\dots,N}(Tcp_i)}{Tcp_i}
512 Using the initial frequency scaling factors computed in (\ref{eq:Scp}), the algorithm computes
513 the initial frequencies for all nodes as a ratio between the maximum frequency of node $i$
514 and the computation scaling factor $Scp_i$ as follows:
517 F_{i} = \frac{Fmax_i}{Scp_i},~{i=1,2,\cdots,N}
519 If the computed initial frequency for a node is not available in the gears of that node, the computed
520 initial frequency is replaced by the nearest available frequency. In figure (\ref{fig:st_freq}),
521 the nodes are sorted by their computing powers in ascending order and the frequencies of the faster
522 nodes are scaled down according to the computed initial frequency scaling factors. The resulting new
523 frequencies are colored in blue in figure (\ref{fig:st_freq}). This set of frequencies can be considered
524 as a higher bound for the search space of the optimal vector of frequencies because selecting frequency
525 scaling factors higher than the higher bound will not improve the performance of the application and
526 it will increase its overall energy consumption. Therefore the algorithm that selects the frequency
527 scaling factors starts the search method from these initial frequencies and takes a downward search direction
528 toward lower frequencies. The algorithm iterates on all left frequencies, from the higher bound until all
529 nodes reach their minimum frequencies, to compute their overall energy consumption and performance, and select
530 the optimal frequency scaling factors vector. At each iteration the algorithm determines the slowest node
531 according to (\ref{eq:perf}) and keeps its frequency unchanged, while it lowers the frequency of
532 all other nodes by one gear.
533 The new overall energy consumption and execution time are computed according to the new scaling factors.
534 The optimal set of frequency scaling factors is the set that gives the highest distance according to the objective
535 function (\ref{eq:max}).
537 The plots~(\ref{fig:r1} and \ref{fig:r2}) illustrate the normalized performance and consumed energy for an
538 application running on a homogeneous platform and a heterogeneous platform respectively while increasing the
539 scaling factors. It can be noticed that in a homogeneous platform the search for the optimal scaling factor
540 should be started from the maximum frequency because the performance and the consumed energy is decreased since
541 the beginning of the plot. On the other hand, in the heterogeneous platform the performance is maintained at
542 the beginning of the plot even if the frequencies of the faster nodes are decreased until the scaled down nodes
543 have computing powers lower than the slowest node. In other words, until they reach the higher bound. It can
544 also be noticed that the higher the difference between the faster nodes and the slower nodes is, the bigger
545 the maximum distance between the energy curve and the performance curve is while varying the scaling factors
546 which results in bigger energy savings.
549 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{fig/start_freq}
550 \caption{Selecting the initial frequencies}
558 \begin{algorithmic}[1]
562 \item[$Tcp_i$] array of all computation times for all nodes during one iteration and with highest frequency.
563 \item[$Tcm_i$] array of all communication times for all nodes during one iteration and with highest frequency.
564 \item[$Fmax_i$] array of the maximum frequencies for all nodes.
565 \item[$Pd_i$] array of the dynamic powers for all nodes.
566 \item[$Ps_i$] array of the static powers for all nodes.
567 \item[$Fdiff_i$] array of the difference between two successive frequencies for all nodes.
569 \Ensure $Sopt_1,Sopt_2 \dots, Sopt_N$ is a vector of optimal scaling factors
571 \State $ Scp_i \gets \frac{\max_{i=1,2,\dots,N}(Tcp_i)}{Tcp_i} $
572 \State $F_{i} \gets \frac{Fmax_i}{Scp_i},~{i=1,2,\cdots,N}$
573 \State Round the computed initial frequencies $F_i$ to the closest one available in each node.
574 \If{(not the first frequency)}
575 \State $F_i \gets F_i+Fdiff_i,~i=1,\dots,N.$
577 \State $T_\textit{Old} \gets max_{~i=1,\dots,N } (Tcp_i+Tcm_i)$
578 \State $E_\textit{Original} \gets \sum_{i=1}^{N}{( Pd_i \cdot Tcp_i)} +\sum_{i=1}^{N} {(Ps_i \cdot T_{Old})}$
579 \State $Sopt_{i} \gets 1,~i=1,\dots,N. $
580 \State $Dist \gets 0 $
581 \While {(all nodes not reach their minimum frequency)}
582 \If{(not the last freq. \textbf{and} not the slowest node)}
583 \State $F_i \gets F_i - Fdiff_i,~i=1,\dots,N.$
584 \State $S_i \gets \frac{Fmax_i}{F_i},~i=1,\dots,N.$
586 \State $T_{New} \gets max_\textit{~i=1,\dots,N} (Tcp_{i} \cdot S_{i}) + MinTcm $
587 \State $E_\textit{Reduced} \gets \sum_{i=1}^{N}{(S_i^{-2} \cdot Pd_i \cdot Tcp_i)} + $ \hspace*{43 mm}
588 $\sum_{i=1}^{N} {(Ps_i \cdot T_{New})} $
589 \State $ P_\textit{Norm} \gets \frac{T_\textit{Old}}{T_\textit{New}}$
590 \State $E_\textit{Norm}\gets \frac{E_\textit{Reduced}}{E_\textit{Original}}$
591 \If{$(\Pnorm - \Enorm > \Dist)$}
592 \State $Sopt_{i} \gets S_{i},~i=1,\dots,N. $
593 \State $\Dist \gets \Pnorm - \Enorm$
596 \State Return $Sopt_1,Sopt_2,\dots,Sopt_N$
598 \caption{frequency scaling factors selection algorithm}
603 \begin{algorithmic}[1]
605 \For {$k=1$ to \textit{some iterations}}
606 \State Computations section.
607 \State Communications section.
609 \State Gather all times of computation and\newline\hspace*{3em}%
610 communication from each node.
611 \State Call algorithm \ref{HSA}.
612 \State Compute the new frequencies from the\newline\hspace*{3em}%
613 returned optimal scaling factors.
614 \State Set the new frequencies to nodes.
618 \caption{DVFS algorithm}
622 \subsection{The evaluation of the proposed algorithm}
623 \label{sec.verif.algo}
624 The precision of the proposed algorithm mainly depends on the execution time prediction model defined in
625 (\ref{eq:perf}) and the energy model computed by (\ref{eq:energy}).
626 The energy model is also significantly dependent on the execution time model because the static energy is
627 linearly related the execution time and the dynamic energy is related to the computation time. So, all of
628 the works presented in this paper is based on the execution time model. To verify this model, the predicted
629 execution time was compared to the real execution time over SimGrid/SMPI simulator, v3.10~\cite{casanova+giersch+legrand+al.2014.versatile},
630 for all the NAS parallel benchmarks NPB v3.3
631 \cite{NAS.Parallel.Benchmarks}, running class B on 8 or 9 nodes. The comparison showed that the proposed execution time model is very precise,
632 the maximum normalized difference between the predicted execution time and the real execution time is equal
633 to 0.03 for all the NAS benchmarks.
635 Since the proposed algorithm is not an exact method and does not test all the possible solutions (vectors of scaling factors)
636 in the search space. To prove its efficiency, it was compared on small instances to a brute force search algorithm
637 that tests all the possible solutions. The brute force algorithm was applied to different NAS benchmarks classes with
638 different number of nodes. The solutions returned by the brute force algorithm and the proposed algorithm were identical
639 and the proposed algorithm was on average 10 times faster than the brute force algorithm. It has a small execution time:
640 for a heterogeneous cluster composed of four different types of nodes having the characteristics presented in
641 table~\ref{table:platform}, it takes on average \np[ms]{0.04} for 4 nodes and \np[ms]{0.15} on average for 144 nodes
642 to compute the best scaling factors vector. The algorithm complexity is $O(F\cdot (N \cdot4) )$, where $F$ is the number
643 of iterations and $N$ is the number of computing nodes. The algorithm needs from 12 to 20 iterations to select the best
644 vector of frequency scaling factors that gives the results of the next sections.
646 \section{Experimental results}
648 To evaluate the efficiency and the overall energy consumption reduction of algorithm~ \ref{HSA},
649 it was applied to the NAS parallel benchmarks NPB v3.3. The experiments were executed
650 on the simulator SimGrid/SMPI which offers easy tools to create a heterogeneous platform and run
651 message passing applications over it. The heterogeneous platform that was used in the experiments,
652 had one core per node because just one process was executed per node.
653 The heterogeneous platform was composed of four types of nodes. Each type of nodes had different
654 characteristics such as the maximum CPU frequency, the number of
655 available frequencies and the computational power, see Table \ref{table:platform}. The characteristics
656 of these different types of nodes are inspired from the specifications of real Intel processors.
657 The heterogeneous platform had up to 144 nodes and had nodes from the four types in equal proportions,
658 for example if a benchmark was executed on 8 nodes, 2 nodes from each type were used. Since the constructors
659 of CPUs do not specify the dynamic and the static power of their CPUs, for each type of node they were
660 chosen proportionally to its computing power (FLOPS). In the initial heterogeneous platform, while computing
661 with highest frequency, each node consumed power proportional to its computing power which 80\% of it was
662 dynamic power and the rest was 20\% for the static power, the same assumption was made in \cite{Our_first_paper,Rauber_Analytical.Modeling.for.Energy}.
663 Finally, These nodes were connected via an ethernet network with 1 Gbit/s bandwidth.
667 \caption{Heterogeneous nodes characteristics}
670 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
672 Node &Simulated & Max & Min & Diff. & Dynamic & Static \\
673 type &GFLOPS & Freq. & Freq. & Freq. & power & power \\
674 & & GHz & GHz &GHz & & \\
676 1 &40 & 2.5 & 1.2 & 0.1 & 20~w &4~w \\
679 2 &50 & 2.66 & 1.6 & 0.133 & 25~w &5~w \\
682 3 &60 & 2.9 & 1.2 & 0.1 & 30~w &6~w \\
685 4 &70 & 3.4 & 1.6 & 0.133 & 35~w &7~w \\
689 \label{table:platform}
693 %\subsection{Performance prediction verification}
696 \subsection{The experimental results of the scaling algorithm}
700 The proposed algorithm was applied to the seven parallel NAS benchmarks (EP, CG, MG, FT, BT, LU and SP)
701 and the benchmarks were executed with the three classes: A,B and C. However, due to the lack of space in
702 this paper, only the results of the biggest class, C, are presented while being run on different number
703 of nodes, ranging from 4 to 128 or 144 nodes depending on the benchmark being executed. Indeed, the
704 benchmarks CG, MG, LU, EP and FT should be executed on $1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128$ nodes.
705 The other benchmarks such as BT and SP should be executed on $1, 4, 9, 16, 36, 64, 144$ nodes.
710 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 4 nodes }
713 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
715 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
716 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
718 CG & 64.64 & 3560.39 &34.16 &6.72 &27.44 \\
720 MG & 18.89 & 1074.87 &35.37 &4.34 &31.03 \\
722 EP &79.73 &5521.04 &26.83 &3.04 &23.79 \\
724 LU &308.65 &21126.00 &34.00 &6.16 &27.84 \\
726 BT &360.12 &21505.55 &35.36 &8.49 &26.87 \\
728 SP &234.24 &13572.16 &35.22 &5.70 &29.52 \\
730 FT &81.58 &4151.48 &35.58 &0.99 &34.59 \\
737 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 8 and 9 nodes }
740 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
742 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
743 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
745 CG &36.11 &3263.49 &31.25 &7.12 &24.13 \\
747 MG &8.99 &953.39 &33.78 &6.41 &27.37 \\
749 EP &40.39 &5652.81 &27.04 &0.49 &26.55 \\
751 LU &218.79 &36149.77 &28.23 &0.01 &28.22 \\
753 BT &166.89 &23207.42 &32.32 &7.89 &24.43 \\
755 SP &104.73 &18414.62 &24.73 &2.78 &21.95 \\
757 FT &51.10 &4913.26 &31.02 &2.54 &28.48 \\
764 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 16 nodes }
767 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
769 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
770 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
772 CG &31.74 &4373.90 &26.29 &9.57 &16.72 \\
774 MG &5.71 &1076.19 &32.49 &6.05 &26.44 \\
776 EP &20.11 &5638.49 &26.85 &0.56 &26.29 \\
778 LU &144.13 &42529.06 &28.80 &6.56 &22.24 \\
780 BT &97.29 &22813.86 &34.95 &5.80 &29.15 \\
782 SP &66.49 &20821.67 &22.49 &3.82 &18.67 \\
784 FT &37.01 &5505.60 &31.59 &6.48 &25.11 \\
787 \label{table:res_16n}
791 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 32 and 36 nodes }
794 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
796 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
797 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
799 CG &32.35 &6704.21 &16.15 &5.30 &10.85 \\
801 MG &4.30 &1355.58 &28.93 &8.85 &20.08 \\
803 EP &9.96 &5519.68 &26.98 &0.02 &26.96 \\
805 LU &99.93 &67463.43 &23.60 &2.45 &21.15 \\
807 BT &48.61 &23796.97 &34.62 &5.83 &28.79 \\
809 SP &46.01 &27007.43 &22.72 &3.45 &19.27 \\
811 FT &28.06 &7142.69 &23.09 &2.90 &20.19 \\
814 \label{table:res_32n}
818 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 64 nodes }
821 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
823 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
824 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
826 CG &46.65 &17521.83 &8.13 &1.68 &6.45 \\
828 MG &3.27 &1534.70 &29.27 &14.35 &14.92 \\
830 EP &5.05 &5471.1084 &27.12 &3.11 &24.01 \\
832 LU &73.92 &101339.16 &21.96 &3.67 &18.29 \\
834 BT &39.99 &27166.71 &32.02 &12.28 &19.74 \\
836 SP &52.00 &49099.28 &24.84 &0.03 &24.81 \\
838 FT &25.97 &10416.82 &20.15 &4.87 &15.28 \\
841 \label{table:res_64n}
846 \caption{Running NAS benchmarks on 128 and 144 nodes }
849 \begin{tabular}{|*{7}{l|}}
851 Program & Execution & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
852 name & time/s & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
854 CG &56.92 &41163.36 &4.00 &1.10 &2.90 \\
856 MG &3.55 &2843.33 &18.77 &10.38 &8.39 \\
858 EP &2.67 &5669.66 &27.09 &0.03 &27.06 \\
860 LU &51.23 &144471.90 &16.67 &2.36 &14.31 \\
862 BT &37.96 &44243.82 &23.18 &1.28 &21.90 \\
864 SP &64.53 &115409.71 &26.72 &0.05 &26.67 \\
866 FT &25.51 &18808.72 &12.85 &2.84 &10.01 \\
869 \label{table:res_128n}
871 The overall energy consumption was computed for each instance according to the energy
872 consumption model (\ref{eq:energy}), with and without applying the algorithm. The
873 execution time was also measured for all these experiments. Then, the energy saving
874 and performance degradation percentages were computed for each instance.
875 The results are presented in Tables (\ref{table:res_4n}, \ref{table:res_8n}, \ref{table:res_16n},
876 \ref{table:res_32n}, \ref{table:res_64n} and \ref{table:res_128n}). All these results are the
877 average values from many experiments for energy savings and performance degradation.
878 The tables show the experimental results for running the NAS parallel benchmarks on different
879 number of nodes. The experiments show that the algorithm reduce significantly the energy
880 consumption (up to 35\%) and tries to limit the performance degradation. They also show that
881 the energy saving percentage is decreased when the number of the computing nodes is increased.
882 This reduction is due to the increase of the communication times compared to the execution times
883 when the benchmarks are run over a high number of nodes. Indeed, the benchmarks with the same class, C,
884 are executed on different number of nodes, so the computation required for each iteration is divided
885 by the number of computing nodes. On the other hand, more communications are required when increasing
886 the number of nodes so the static energy is increased linearly according to the communication time and
887 the dynamic power is less relevant in the overall energy consumption. Therefore, reducing the frequency
888 with algorithm~(\ref{HSA}) have less effect in reducing the overall energy savings. It can also be
889 noticed that for the benchmarks EP and SP that contain little or no communications, the energy savings
890 are not significantly affected with the high number of nodes. No experiments were conducted using bigger
891 classes such as D, because they require a lot of memory(more than 64GB) when being executed by the simulator
892 on one machine. The maximum distance between the normalized energy curve and the normalized performance
893 for each instance is also shown in the result tables. It is decreased in the same way as the energy
894 saving percentage. The tables also show that the performance degradation percentage is not significantly
895 increased when the number of computing nodes is increased because the computation times are small when
896 compared to the communication times.
902 \subfloat[Energy saving]{%
903 \includegraphics[width=.33\textwidth]{fig/energy}\label{fig:energy}}%
905 \subfloat[Performance degradation ]{%
906 \includegraphics[width=.33\textwidth]{fig/per_deg}\label{fig:per_deg}}
908 \caption{The energy and performance for all NAS benchmarks running with difference number of nodes}
911 Plots (\ref{fig:energy} and \ref{fig:per_deg}) present the energy saving and performance degradation
912 respectively for all the benchmarks according to the number of used nodes. As shown in the first plot,
913 the energy saving percentages of the benchmarks MG, LU, BT and FT are decreased linearly when the
914 number of nodes is increased. While for the EP and SP benchmarks, the energy saving percentage is not
915 affected by the increase of the number of computing nodes, because in these benchmarks there are little or
916 no communications. Finally, the energy saving of the GC benchmark is significantly decreased when the number
917 of nodes is increased because this benchmark has more communications than the others. The second plot
918 shows that the performance degradation percentages of most of the benchmarks are decreased when they
919 run on a big number of nodes because they spend more time communicating than computing, thus, scaling
920 down the frequencies of some nodes have less effect on the performance.
925 \subsection{The results for different power consumption scenarios}
927 The results of the previous section were obtained while using processors that consume during computation
928 an overall power which is 80\% composed of dynamic power and 20\% of static power. In this section,
929 these ratios are changed and two new power scenarios are considered in order to evaluate how the proposed
930 algorithm adapts itself according to the static and dynamic power values. The two new power scenarios
934 \item 70\% dynamic power and 30\% static power
935 \item 90\% dynamic power and 10\% static power
938 The NAS parallel benchmarks were executed again over processors that follow the new power scenarios.
939 The class C of each benchmark was run over 8 or 9 nodes and the results are presented in Tables
940 \ref{table:res_s1} and \ref{table:res_s2}. These tables show that the energy saving percentage of the 70\%-30\%
941 scenario is less for all benchmarks compared to the energy saving of the 90\%-10\% scenario. Indeed, in the latter
942 more dynamic power is consumed when nodes are running on their maximum frequencies, thus, scaling down the frequency
943 of the nodes results in higher energy savings than in the 70\%-30\% scenario. On the other hand, the performance
944 degradation percentage is less in the 70\%-30\% scenario compared to the 90\%-10\% scenario. This is due to the
945 higher static power percentage in the first scenario which makes it more relevant in the overall consumed energy.
946 Indeed, the static energy is related to the execution time and if the performance is degraded the total consumed
947 static energy is directly increased. Therefore, the proposed algorithm do not scales down much the frequencies of the
948 nodes in order to limit the increase of the execution time and thus limiting the effect of the consumed static energy.
950 The two new power scenarios are compared to the old one in figure (\ref{fig:sen_comp}). It shows the average of
951 the performance degradation, the energy saving and the distances for all NAS benchmarks of class C running on 8 or 9 nodes.
952 The comparison shows that the energy saving ratio is proportional to the dynamic power ratio: it is increased
953 when applying the 90\%-10\% scenario because at maximum frequency the dynamic energy is the most relevant
954 in the overall consumed energy and can be reduced by lowering the frequency of some processors. On the other hand,
955 the energy saving is decreased when the 70\%-30\% scenario is used because the dynamic energy is less relevant in
956 the overall consumed energy and lowering the frequency do not returns big energy savings.
957 Moreover, the average of the performance degradation is decreased when using a higher ratio for static power
958 (e.g. 70\%-30\% scenario and 80\%-20\% scenario). Since the proposed algorithm optimizes the energy consumption
959 when using a higher ratio for dynamic power the algorithm selects bigger frequency scaling factors that result in
960 more energy saving but less performance, for example see the figure (\ref{fig:scales_comp}). The opposite happens
961 when using a higher ratio for static power, the algorithm proportionally selects smaller scaling values which
962 results in less energy saving but less performance degradation.
966 \caption{The results of 70\%-30\% powers scenario}
969 \begin{tabular}{|*{6}{l|}}
971 Program & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
972 name & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
974 CG &4144.21 &22.42 &7.72 &14.70 \\
976 MG &1133.23 &24.50 &5.34 &19.16 \\
978 EP &6170.30 &16.19 &0.02 &16.17 \\
980 LU &39477.28 &20.43 &0.07 &20.36 \\
982 BT &26169.55 &25.34 &6.62 &18.71 \\
984 SP &19620.09 &19.32 &3.66 &15.66 \\
986 FT &6094.07 &23.17 &0.36 &22.81 \\
995 \caption{The results of 90\%-10\% powers scenario}
998 \begin{tabular}{|*{6}{l|}}
1000 Program & Energy & Energy & Performance & Distance \\
1001 name & consumption/J & saving\% & degradation\% & \\
1003 CG &2812.38 &36.36 &6.80 &29.56 \\
1005 MG &825.427 &38.35 &6.41 &31.94 \\
1007 EP &5281.62 &35.02 &2.68 &32.34 \\
1009 LU &31611.28 &39.15 &3.51 &35.64 \\
1011 BT &21296.46 &36.70 &6.60 &30.10 \\
1013 SP &15183.42 &35.19 &11.76 &23.43 \\
1015 FT &3856.54 &40.80 &5.67 &35.13 \\
1018 \label{table:res_s2}
1024 \subfloat[Comparison of the results on 8 nodes]{%
1025 \includegraphics[width=.30\textwidth]{fig/sen_comp}\label{fig:sen_comp}}%
1027 \subfloat[Comparison the selected frequency scaling factors of MG benchmark class C running on 8 nodes]{%
1028 \includegraphics[width=.34\textwidth]{fig/three_scenarios}\label{fig:scales_comp}}
1030 \caption{The comparison of the three power scenarios}
1036 \subsection{The comparison of the proposed scaling algorithm }
1037 \label{sec.compare_EDP}
1039 In this section, we compare our scaling factors selection algorithm
1040 with Spiliopoulos et al. algorithm \cite{Spiliopoulos_Green.governors.Adaptive.DVFS}.
1041 They developed an online frequency selecting algorithm running over multicore architecture.
1042 The algorithm predicted both the energy and performance during the runtime of the program, then
1043 selecting the frequencies that minimized the energy and delay products (EDP), $EDP=Enegry*Delay$.
1044 To be able to compare with this algorithm, we used our energy and execution time models in prediction process,
1045 equations (\ref{eq:energy}) and (\ref{eq:fnew}). Also their algorithm is adapted to taking into account
1046 the heterogeneous platform to starts selecting the
1047 initial frequencies using the equation (\ref{eq:Fint}). The algorithm built to test all possible frequencies as
1048 a brute-force search algorithm.
1050 The comparison results of running NAS benchmarks class C on 8 or 9 nodes are
1051 presented in table \ref{table:compare_EDP}. The results show that our algorithm has a biggest energy saving percentage,
1052 on average it has 29.76\% and thier algorithm has 25.75\%,
1053 while the average of performance degradation percentage is approximately the same, the average for our algorithm is
1054 equal to 3.89\% and for their algorithm is equal to 4.03\%. In general, our algorithm outperforms
1055 Spiliopoulos et al. algorithm in term of energy and performance tradeoff see figure (\ref{fig:compare_EDP}).
1056 This because our algorithm maximized the difference (the distance) between the energy saving and the performance degradation
1057 comparing to their EDP optimization function. It is also keeps the frequency of the slowest node without change
1058 that gave some enhancements to the energy and performance tradeoff.
1062 \caption{Comparing the proposed algorithm}
1064 \begin{tabular}{|l|l|l|l|l|l|l|l|}
1066 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{\multirow{2}{*}{\begin{tabular}[c]{@{}l@{}}Program \\ name\end{tabular}}} & \multicolumn{2}{l|}{Energy saving \%} & \multicolumn{2}{l|}{Perf. degradation \%} & \multicolumn{2}{l|}{Distance} \\ \cline{3-8}
1067 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{} & EDP & MaxDist & EDP & MaxDist & EDP & MaxDist \\ \hline
1068 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{CG} & 27.58 & 31.25 & 5.82 & 7.12 & 21.76 & 24.13 \\ \hline
1069 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{MG} & 29.49 & 33.78 & 3.74 & 6.41 & 25.75 & 27.37 \\ \hline
1070 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{LU} & 19.55 & 28.33 & 0.0 & 0.01 & 19.55 & 28.22 \\ \hline
1071 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{EP} & 28.40 & 27.04 & 4.29 & 0.49 & 24.11 & 26.55 \\ \hline
1072 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{BT} & 27.68 & 32.32 & 6.45 & 7.87 & 21.23 & 24.43 \\ \hline
1073 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{SP} & 20.52 & 24.73 & 5.21 & 2.78 & 15.31 & 21.95 \\ \hline
1074 \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{FT} & 27.03 & 31.02 & 2.75 & 2.54 & 24.28 & 28.48 \\ \hline
1077 \label{table:compare_EDP}
1084 \includegraphics[scale=0.5]{fig/compare_EDP.pdf}
1085 \caption{Tradeoff comparison for NAS benchmarks class C}
1086 \label{fig:compare_EDP}
1090 \section{Conclusion}
1092 In this paper, a new online frequency selecting algorithm has been presented. It selects the best possible vector of frequency scaling factors that gives the maximum distance (optimal tradeoff) between the predicted energy and
1093 the predicted performance curves for a heterogeneous platform. This algorithm uses a new energy model for measuring
1094 and predicting the energy of distributed iterative applications running over heterogeneous
1095 platform. To evaluate the proposed method, it was applied on the NAS parallel benchmarks and executed over a heterogeneous platform simulated by Simgrid. The results of the experiments showed that the algorithm reduces up to 35\% the energy consumption of a message passing iterative method while limiting the degradation of the performance. The algorithm also selects different scaling factors according to the percentage of the computing and communication times, and according to the values of the static and dynamic powers of the CPUs. \textcolor{red}{ We compare our algorithm with Spiliopoulos et al. algorithm, the comparison results showed that our
1096 algorithm outperforms their algorithm in term of energy-time tradeoff.}
1098 In the near future, this method will be applied to real heterogeneous platforms to evaluate its performance in a real study case. It would also be interesting to evaluate its scalability over large scale heterogeneous platform and measure the energy consumption reduction it can produce. Afterward, we would like to develop a similar method that is adapted to asynchronous iterative applications
1099 where each task does not wait for others tasks to finish there works. The development of such method might require a new
1100 energy model because the number of iterations is not
1101 known in advance and depends on the global convergence of the iterative system.
1103 \section*{Acknowledgment}
1105 This work has been partially supported by the Labex
1106 ACTION project (contract “ANR-11-LABX-01-01”). As a PhD student,
1107 Mr. Ahmed Fanfakh, would like to thank the University of
1108 Babylon (Iraq) for supporting his work.
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