DocumentCode
2050581
Title
A framework to develop symbolic performance models of parallel applications
Author
Alam, Sadaf R. ; Vetter, Jeffrey S.
Author_Institution
Oak Ridge Nat. Lab., TN
fYear
2006
fDate
25-29 April 2006
Abstract
Performance and workload modeling has numerous uses at every stage of the high-end computing lifecycle: design, integration, procurement, installation and tuning. Despite the tremendous usefulness of performance models, their construction remains largely a manual, complex, and time-consuming exercise. We propose a new approach to the model construction, called modeling assertions (MA), which borrows advantages from both the empirical and analytical modeling techniques. This strategy has many advantages over traditional methods: incremental construction of realistic performance models, straightforward model validation against empirical data, and intuitive error bounding on individual model terms. We demonstrate this new technique on the NAS parallel CG and SP benchmarks by constructing high fidelity models for the floating-point operation cost, memory requirements, and MPI message volume. These models are driven by a small number of key input parameters thereby allowing efficient design space exploration of future problem sizes and architectures
Keywords
parallel processing; performance evaluation; MPI message volume; error bounding; floating-point operation cost; incremental model construction; memory requirements; model validation; modeling assertions; parallel applications; performance modeling; symbolic performance models; workload modeling; Analytical models; Character generation; Communication system control; Costs; High performance computing; Mathematical model; Performance analysis; Predictive models; Procurement; Space exploration;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, 2006. IPDPS 2006. 20th International
Conference_Location
Rhodes Island
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0054-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPDPS.2006.1639625
Filename
1639625
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