Title :
A Comparison of Two Approaches to Parallel Simulation of Multiprocessors
Author :
Over, Andrew ; Clarke, Bill ; Strazdins, Peter
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Australian Nat. Univ., Canberra, ACT
Abstract :
The design trend towards CMPs has made the simulation of multiprocessor systems a necessity and has also made multiprocessor systems widely available. While a serial multiprocessor simulation necessarily imposes a linear slowdown, running such a simulation in parallel may help mitigate this effect. In this paper we document our experiences with two different methods of parallelizing Sparc Sulima, a simulator of UltraSPARC IIICu-based multiprocessor systems. In the first approach, a simple interconnect model within the simulator is parallelized non-deterministically using careful locking. In the second, a detailed interconnect model is parallelized while preserving determinism using parallel discrete event simulation (PDES) techniques. While both approaches demonstrate a threefold speedup using 4 threads on workloads from the NAS parallel benchmarks, speedup proved constrained by load-balancing between simulated processors. A theoretical model is developed to help understand why observed speedup is less than ideal. An analysis of the related speed-accuracy tradeoff in the first approach with respect to the simulation time quantum is also given; the results show that, for both serial and parallel simulation, a quantum in the order of a few hundreds of cycles represents a `sweet-spot´, but parallel simulation is significantly more accurate for a given quantum size. As with the speedup analysis, these effects are workload dependent
Keywords :
discrete event simulation; multiprocessing systems; resource allocation; NAS parallel benchmarks; Sparc Sulima; UltraSPARC IIICu-based multiprocessor systems; careful locking; interconnect model; load-balancing; parallel discrete event simulation; parallel simulation; serial simulation; simulation time quantum; speedup analysis; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Computer simulation; Discrete event simulation; Multicore processing; Multiprocessing systems; Power system modeling; Process design; Protocols; Yarn;
Conference_Titel :
Performance Analysis of Systems & Software, 2007. ISPASS 2007. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-1082-7
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-1082-7
DOI :
10.1109/ISPASS.2007.363732