Title :
The impact of hyper-threading on processor resource utilization in production applications
Author :
Saini, Subhash ; Jin, Haoqiang ; Hood, Robert ; Barker, David ; Mehrotra, USAPiyush ; Biswas, Rupak
Author_Institution :
NASA Adv. Supercomput. Div., NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
Abstract :
Intel provides Hyper-Threading (HT) in processors based on its Pentium and Nehalem micro-architecture such as the Westmere-EP. HT enables two threads to execute on each core in order to hide latencies related to data access. These two threads can execute simultaneously, filling unused stages in the functional unit pipelines. To aid better understanding of HT-related issues, we collect Performance Monitoring Unit (PMU) data (instructions retired; unhalted core cycles; L2 and L3 cache hits and misses; vector and scalar floating-point operations, etc.). We then use the PMU data to calculate a new metric of efficiency in order to quantify processor resource utilization and make comparisons of that utilization between single-threading (ST) and HT modes. We also study performance gain using unhalted core cycles, code efficiency of using vector units of the processor, and the impact of HT mode on various shared resources like L2 and L3 cache. Results using four full-scale, production-quality scientific applications from computational fluid dynamics (CFD) used by NASA scientists indicate that HT generally improves processor resource utilization efficiency, but does not necessarily translate into overall application performance gain.
Keywords :
computational fluid dynamics; information retrieval; microprocessor chips; multi-threading; performance evaluation; resource allocation; HT-related issue; NASA scientist; Nehalem microarchitecture; PMU data; Pentium microarchitecture; code efficiency; computational fluid dynamics; data access; functional unit pipeline; hyper-threading; performance monitoring unit; processor resource utilization; production application; production-quality scientific application; resource sharing; single-threading mode; unhalted core cycle; Bandwidth; Computational fluid dynamics; Hardware; Instruction sets; Performance gain; Phasor measurement units; Radiation detectors; Benchmarking; Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD); Hyper-Threading (HT); Intel Westmere-EP; Intel´s Nehalem micro-architecture; Performance Evaluation; Performance Tools; SGI Altix ICE 8400EX; Simultaneous Multi-Threading (SMT);
Conference_Titel :
High Performance Computing (HiPC), 2011 18th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Bangalore
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1951-6
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1949-3
DOI :
10.1109/HiPC.2011.6152743