• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Optimisation de la performance des applications de mémoire transactionnelle sur des plates-formes multicoeurs : une approche basée sur l'apprentissage automatique / Improving the Performance of Transactional Memory Applications on Multicores : A Machine Learning-based Approach

Castro, Márcio 03 December 2012 (has links)
Le concept de processeur multicœurs constitue le facteur dominant pour offrir des hautes performances aux applications parallèles. Afin de développer des applications parallèles capable de tirer profit de ces plate-formes, les développeurs doivent prendre en compte plusieurs aspects, allant de l'architecture aux caractéristiques propres à l'application. Dans ce contexte, la Mémoire Transactionnelle (Transactional Memory – TM) apparaît comme une alternative intéressante à la synchronisation basée sur les verrous pour ces plates-formes. Elle permet aux programmeurs d'écrire du code parallèle encapsulé dans des transactions, offrant des garanties comme l'atomicité et l'isolement. Lors de l'exécution, les opérations sont exécutées spéculativement et les conflits sont résolus par ré-exécution des transactions en conflit. Bien que le modèle de TM ait pour but de simplifier la programmation concurrente, les meilleures performances ne pourront être obtenues que si l'exécutif est capable de s'adapter aux caractéristiques des applications et de la plate-forme. Les contributions de cette thèse concernent l'analyse et l'amélioration des performances des applications basées sur la Mémoire Transactionnelle Logicielle (Software Transactional Memory – STM) pour des plates-formes multicœurs. Dans un premier temps, nous montrons que le modèle de TM et ses performances sont difficiles à analyser. Pour s'attaquer à ce problème, nous proposons un mécanisme de traçage générique et portable qui permet de récupérer des événements spécifiques à la TM afin de mieux analyser les performances des applications. Par exemple, les données tracées peuvent être utilisées pour détecter si l'application présente des points de contention ou si cette contention est répartie sur toute l'exécution. Notre approche peut être utilisée sur différentes applications et systèmes STM sans modifier leurs codes sources. Ensuite, nous abordons l'amélioration des performances des applications sur des plate-formes multicœurs. Nous soulignons que le placement des threads (thread mapping) est très important et peut améliorer considérablement les performances globales obtenues. Pour faire face à la grande diversité des applications, des systèmes STM et des plates-formes, nous proposons une approche basée sur l'Apprentissage Automatique (Machine Learning) pour prédire automatiquement les stratégies de placement de threads appropriées pour les applications de TM. Au cours d'une phase d'apprentissage préliminaire, nous construisons les profiles des applications s'exécutant sur différents systèmes STM pour obtenir un prédicteur. Nous utilisons ensuite ce prédicteur pour placer les threads de façon statique ou dynamique dans un système STM récent. Finalement, nous effectuons une évaluation expérimentale et nous montrons que l'approche statique est suffisamment précise et améliore les performances d'un ensemble d'applications d'un maximum de 18%. En ce qui concerne l'approche dynamique, nous montrons que l'on peut détecter des changements de phase d'exécution des applications composées des diverses charges de travail, en prévoyant une stratégie de placement appropriée pour chaque phase. Sur ces applications, nous avons obtenu des améliorations de performances d'un maximum de 31% par rapport à la meilleure stratégie statique. / Multicore processors are now a mainstream approach to deliver higher performance to parallel applications. In order to develop efficient parallel applications for those platforms, developers must take care of several aspects, ranging from the architectural to the application level. In this context, Transactional Memory (TM) appears as a programmer friendly alternative to traditional lock-based concurrency for those platforms. It allows programmers to write parallel code as transactions, which are guaranteed to execute atomically and in isolation regardless of eventual data races. At runtime, transactions are executed speculatively and conflicts are solved by re-executing conflicting transactions. Although TM intends to simplify concurrent programming, the best performance can only be obtained if the underlying runtime system matches the application and platform characteristics. The contributions of this thesis concern the analysis and improvement of the performance of TM applications based on Software Transactional Memory (STM) on multicore platforms. Firstly, we show that the TM model makes the performance analysis of TM applications a daunting task. To tackle this problem, we propose a generic and portable tracing mechanism that gathers specific TM events, allowing us to better understand the performances obtained. The traced data can be used, for instance, to discover if the TM application presents points of contention or if the contention is spread out over the whole execution. Our tracing mechanism can be used with different TM applications and STM systems without any changes in their original source codes. Secondly, we address the performance improvement of TM applications on multicores. We point out that thread mapping is very important for TM applications and it can considerably improve the global performances achieved. To deal with the large diversity of TM applications, STM systems and multicore platforms, we propose an approach based on Machine Learning to automatically predict suitable thread mapping strategies for TM applications. During a prior learning phase, we profile several TM applications running on different STM systems to construct a predictor. We then use the predictor to perform static or dynamic thread mapping in a state-of-the-art STM system, making it transparent to the users. Finally, we perform an experimental evaluation and we show that the static approach is fairly accurate and can improve the performance of a set of TM applications by up to 18%. Concerning the dynamic approach, we show that it can detect different phase changes during the execution of TM applications composed of diverse workloads, predicting thread mappings adapted for each phase. On those applications, we achieve performance improvements of up to 31% in comparison to the best static strategy.
2

Dynamic detection of the communication pattern in shared memory environments for thread mapping / Detecção dinâmica do padrão de comunicação em ambientes de memória compartilhada para o mapeamento de threads

Cruz, Eduardo Henrique Molina da January 2012 (has links)
As threads de aplicações paralelas cooperam a fim de cumprir suas tarefas, dessa forma, comunicação é realizada entre elas. A latência de comunicação entre os núcleos em arquiteturas multiprocessadas diferem dependendo da hierarquia de memória e das interconexões. Com o aumento do número de núcleos por chip e número de threads por núcleo, esta diferença entre as latências de comunicação está aumentando. Portanto, é importante mapear as threads de aplicações paralelas levando em conta a comunicação entre elas. Em aplicações paralelas baseadas no paradigma de memória compartilhada, a comunicação é implícita e ocorre através de acessos à variáveis compartilhadas, o que torna difícil a descoberta do padrão de comunicação entre as threads. Mecanismos tradicionais usam simulação para monitorar os acessos à memória realizados pela aplicação, requerendo modificações no código fonte e aumentando drasticamente a sobrecarga. Nesta dissertação de mestrado, são introduzidos dois mecanismos inovadores com uma baixa sobrecarga para se detectar o padrão de comunicação entre threads. O primeiro mecanismo faz uso de informações sobre linhas compartilhadas de caches providas por protocolos de coerência de cache. O segundo mecanismo utiliza a Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) para detectar quais páginas de memória cada núcleo está acessando. Ambos os mecanismos dependem totalmente do hardware, o que torna o mapeamento de threads transparente aos programadores e permite que ele seja realizado dinamicamente pelo sistema operacional. Além disto, nenhuma tarefa de alta sobrecarga, como simulação, é requerida. As propostas foram avaliadas com o NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB), obtendo representações precisas dos padrões de comunicação. Mapeamentos para as threads foram gerados utilizando os padrões de comunicação descobertos e um algoritmo de mapeamento. O problema do mapeamento é NP-Difícil. Portanto, de forma a se atingir uma complexidade polinomial, o algoritmo empregado é heurístico, baseado no algoritmo de emparelhamento de grafos de Edmonds. Executando as aplicações com o mapeamento resultou em um ganho de desempenho de até 15; 3%. O número de faltas na cache, invalidações em linhas de cache e transações de espionagem foram reduzidos em até 31; 9%, 41% e 65; 4%, respectivamente. / The threads of parallel applications cooperate in order to fulfill their tasks, thereby communication is performed among themselves. The communication latency between the cores in a multiprocessor architecture differs depending on the memory hierarchy and the interconnections. With the increase in the number of cores per chip and the number of threads per core, this difference between the communication latencies is increasing. Therefore, it is important to map the threads of parallel applications taking into account the communication between them. In parallel applications based on the shared memory paradigm, the communication is implicit and occurs through accesses to shared variables, which makes difficult to detect the communication pattern between the threads. Traditional approaches use simulation to monitor the memory accesses performed by the application, requiring modifications to the source code and drastically increasing the overhead. In this master thesis, we introduce two novel light-weight mechanisms to find the communication pattern of threads. The first mechanism makes use of the information about shared cache lines provided by cache coherence protocols. The second mechanism makes use of the Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) to detect which memory pages each core is accessing. Both our mechanisms rely entirely on hardware features, which makes the thread mapping transparent to the programmer and allows it to be performed dynamically by the operating system. Moreover, no time consuming task, such as simulation, is required. We evaluated our mechanisms with the NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB) and obtained accurate representations of the communication patterns. We generated thread mappings from the detected communication patterns using a mapping algorithm. Mapping is a NP-Hard problem. Therefore, in order to achieve a polynomial complexity, we designed a heuristic method based on the Edmonds graph matching algorithm. Running the applications with these mappings resulted in performance improvements of up to 15.3% compared to the original scheduler of the operating system. The number of cache misses, cache line invalidations and snoop transactions were reduced by up to 31.9%, 41% and 65.4%, respectively.
3

Dynamic detection of the communication pattern in shared memory environments for thread mapping / Detecção dinâmica do padrão de comunicação em ambientes de memória compartilhada para o mapeamento de threads

Cruz, Eduardo Henrique Molina da January 2012 (has links)
As threads de aplicações paralelas cooperam a fim de cumprir suas tarefas, dessa forma, comunicação é realizada entre elas. A latência de comunicação entre os núcleos em arquiteturas multiprocessadas diferem dependendo da hierarquia de memória e das interconexões. Com o aumento do número de núcleos por chip e número de threads por núcleo, esta diferença entre as latências de comunicação está aumentando. Portanto, é importante mapear as threads de aplicações paralelas levando em conta a comunicação entre elas. Em aplicações paralelas baseadas no paradigma de memória compartilhada, a comunicação é implícita e ocorre através de acessos à variáveis compartilhadas, o que torna difícil a descoberta do padrão de comunicação entre as threads. Mecanismos tradicionais usam simulação para monitorar os acessos à memória realizados pela aplicação, requerendo modificações no código fonte e aumentando drasticamente a sobrecarga. Nesta dissertação de mestrado, são introduzidos dois mecanismos inovadores com uma baixa sobrecarga para se detectar o padrão de comunicação entre threads. O primeiro mecanismo faz uso de informações sobre linhas compartilhadas de caches providas por protocolos de coerência de cache. O segundo mecanismo utiliza a Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) para detectar quais páginas de memória cada núcleo está acessando. Ambos os mecanismos dependem totalmente do hardware, o que torna o mapeamento de threads transparente aos programadores e permite que ele seja realizado dinamicamente pelo sistema operacional. Além disto, nenhuma tarefa de alta sobrecarga, como simulação, é requerida. As propostas foram avaliadas com o NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB), obtendo representações precisas dos padrões de comunicação. Mapeamentos para as threads foram gerados utilizando os padrões de comunicação descobertos e um algoritmo de mapeamento. O problema do mapeamento é NP-Difícil. Portanto, de forma a se atingir uma complexidade polinomial, o algoritmo empregado é heurístico, baseado no algoritmo de emparelhamento de grafos de Edmonds. Executando as aplicações com o mapeamento resultou em um ganho de desempenho de até 15; 3%. O número de faltas na cache, invalidações em linhas de cache e transações de espionagem foram reduzidos em até 31; 9%, 41% e 65; 4%, respectivamente. / The threads of parallel applications cooperate in order to fulfill their tasks, thereby communication is performed among themselves. The communication latency between the cores in a multiprocessor architecture differs depending on the memory hierarchy and the interconnections. With the increase in the number of cores per chip and the number of threads per core, this difference between the communication latencies is increasing. Therefore, it is important to map the threads of parallel applications taking into account the communication between them. In parallel applications based on the shared memory paradigm, the communication is implicit and occurs through accesses to shared variables, which makes difficult to detect the communication pattern between the threads. Traditional approaches use simulation to monitor the memory accesses performed by the application, requiring modifications to the source code and drastically increasing the overhead. In this master thesis, we introduce two novel light-weight mechanisms to find the communication pattern of threads. The first mechanism makes use of the information about shared cache lines provided by cache coherence protocols. The second mechanism makes use of the Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) to detect which memory pages each core is accessing. Both our mechanisms rely entirely on hardware features, which makes the thread mapping transparent to the programmer and allows it to be performed dynamically by the operating system. Moreover, no time consuming task, such as simulation, is required. We evaluated our mechanisms with the NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB) and obtained accurate representations of the communication patterns. We generated thread mappings from the detected communication patterns using a mapping algorithm. Mapping is a NP-Hard problem. Therefore, in order to achieve a polynomial complexity, we designed a heuristic method based on the Edmonds graph matching algorithm. Running the applications with these mappings resulted in performance improvements of up to 15.3% compared to the original scheduler of the operating system. The number of cache misses, cache line invalidations and snoop transactions were reduced by up to 31.9%, 41% and 65.4%, respectively.
4

Dynamic detection of the communication pattern in shared memory environments for thread mapping / Detecção dinâmica do padrão de comunicação em ambientes de memória compartilhada para o mapeamento de threads

Cruz, Eduardo Henrique Molina da January 2012 (has links)
As threads de aplicações paralelas cooperam a fim de cumprir suas tarefas, dessa forma, comunicação é realizada entre elas. A latência de comunicação entre os núcleos em arquiteturas multiprocessadas diferem dependendo da hierarquia de memória e das interconexões. Com o aumento do número de núcleos por chip e número de threads por núcleo, esta diferença entre as latências de comunicação está aumentando. Portanto, é importante mapear as threads de aplicações paralelas levando em conta a comunicação entre elas. Em aplicações paralelas baseadas no paradigma de memória compartilhada, a comunicação é implícita e ocorre através de acessos à variáveis compartilhadas, o que torna difícil a descoberta do padrão de comunicação entre as threads. Mecanismos tradicionais usam simulação para monitorar os acessos à memória realizados pela aplicação, requerendo modificações no código fonte e aumentando drasticamente a sobrecarga. Nesta dissertação de mestrado, são introduzidos dois mecanismos inovadores com uma baixa sobrecarga para se detectar o padrão de comunicação entre threads. O primeiro mecanismo faz uso de informações sobre linhas compartilhadas de caches providas por protocolos de coerência de cache. O segundo mecanismo utiliza a Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) para detectar quais páginas de memória cada núcleo está acessando. Ambos os mecanismos dependem totalmente do hardware, o que torna o mapeamento de threads transparente aos programadores e permite que ele seja realizado dinamicamente pelo sistema operacional. Além disto, nenhuma tarefa de alta sobrecarga, como simulação, é requerida. As propostas foram avaliadas com o NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB), obtendo representações precisas dos padrões de comunicação. Mapeamentos para as threads foram gerados utilizando os padrões de comunicação descobertos e um algoritmo de mapeamento. O problema do mapeamento é NP-Difícil. Portanto, de forma a se atingir uma complexidade polinomial, o algoritmo empregado é heurístico, baseado no algoritmo de emparelhamento de grafos de Edmonds. Executando as aplicações com o mapeamento resultou em um ganho de desempenho de até 15; 3%. O número de faltas na cache, invalidações em linhas de cache e transações de espionagem foram reduzidos em até 31; 9%, 41% e 65; 4%, respectivamente. / The threads of parallel applications cooperate in order to fulfill their tasks, thereby communication is performed among themselves. The communication latency between the cores in a multiprocessor architecture differs depending on the memory hierarchy and the interconnections. With the increase in the number of cores per chip and the number of threads per core, this difference between the communication latencies is increasing. Therefore, it is important to map the threads of parallel applications taking into account the communication between them. In parallel applications based on the shared memory paradigm, the communication is implicit and occurs through accesses to shared variables, which makes difficult to detect the communication pattern between the threads. Traditional approaches use simulation to monitor the memory accesses performed by the application, requiring modifications to the source code and drastically increasing the overhead. In this master thesis, we introduce two novel light-weight mechanisms to find the communication pattern of threads. The first mechanism makes use of the information about shared cache lines provided by cache coherence protocols. The second mechanism makes use of the Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) to detect which memory pages each core is accessing. Both our mechanisms rely entirely on hardware features, which makes the thread mapping transparent to the programmer and allows it to be performed dynamically by the operating system. Moreover, no time consuming task, such as simulation, is required. We evaluated our mechanisms with the NAS Parallel Benchmarks (NPB) and obtained accurate representations of the communication patterns. We generated thread mappings from the detected communication patterns using a mapping algorithm. Mapping is a NP-Hard problem. Therefore, in order to achieve a polynomial complexity, we designed a heuristic method based on the Edmonds graph matching algorithm. Running the applications with these mappings resulted in performance improvements of up to 15.3% compared to the original scheduler of the operating system. The number of cache misses, cache line invalidations and snoop transactions were reduced by up to 31.9%, 41% and 65.4%, respectively.

Page generated in 0.0468 seconds