Concurrency and computation: practice and experience



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3 Evaluation Methodology


We devised our evaluation methodology, which covers the vital aspects of shared-memory and distributed-memory benchmarking, in order to provide a systematic view of the analysis of ARM SoC based systems for single-nodes and multi-node configurations. The benchmarks represent application classes that are representative of large-scale computing platforms (e.g., molecular dynamics, n-body simulations, and others). In this section, we discuss benchmark applications and their purposes in detail.

Memory bandwidth is the key benchmark that provides a basis for understanding the performance limitations of the systems under test. We used the STREAM benchmark to measure the memory bandwidth for ARM Cortex-A9 and Intel x86 in the single node tests. We also compared the memory bandwidth performances for C and Java-based versions of STREAM on ARM Cortex-A9. STREAM is a widely used benchmark that uses simple vector kernels to measure the memory bandwidth (in MB/s) and the corresponding computational performance levels of the systems under test. Three out of the four kernels (i.e., Triad, Sum, and Scale) perform arithmetic operations and the other kernel (i.e., Copy) counts the read and written bytes. Our interest was mainly focused on Triad because Multiply and Accumulate are the most widely used computations in scientific computing. The Triad kernel scales a vector, adds it to another vector, and stores the result in a third vector.

The database server performance levels for ARM Cortex-A9 and Intel x86 were evaluated using the Sysbench MySQL OLTP test [25]. Using this test, we provided apple-to-apple comparisons of Intel x86 and ARM Cortex-A9 in terms of performance for query processing and energy efficiency. We created a large table with a size of one million rows in MySQL and used INSERT and SELECT for test queries. The performance metrics used include transactions per second and transactions per second per Watt.

We used the PARSEC shared memory benchmark to evaluate the multithreaded performance levels of ARM Cortex-A9 and Intel x86 servers. The PARSEC benchmark is composed of multithreaded programs and focuses on emerging workloads. It is designed to be the representative of the next generation of shared memory programs for shared memory chip-multiprocessors (SMPs). The workloads are diverse in nature and are chosen from different areas such as computational fluid dynamics and computational finance. Two applications of PARSEC benchmarking, namely Black-Scholes and Fluidanimate, were evaluated for strong scaling tests.

Since we are using message passing libraries to evaluate distributed memory benchmarks, the network performance is a critical factor that needs to be considered here. We performed bandwidth and latency tests on our Weiser cluster using C- and Java-based message passing libraries (MPICH and MPJ-Express) and provided a baseline for the performance trade-offs and limitations. The distributed memory cluster benchmark contains three major HPC benchmarks: HPL, Gadget-2, and the NAS Parallel Benchmark (NPB) [26]. HPL is currently a de-facto standard for benchmarking large-scale compute clusters. The TOP500 list of supercomputers uses the HPL score to rank the world’s fastest supercomputers. The benchmark kernels solve problems in random dense linear systems at double precision using 64-bit arithmetic on distributed-memory systems. They use generic implementations of MPI [11] for message passing and BLAS [27] libraries for linear algebra operations. We evaluated the performance of our ARM-based cluster for C- and Fortran-based executions of HPL. The main purpose of this benchmark is to show the performance levels for ARM SoC-based clusters under BLAS libraries for 64-bit arithmetic.

Gadget-2 [28] is a massively parallel structure formation code for N-body hydrodynamic simulations. It simulates the evolution of very large cosmological systems under the influence of gravitational and hydrodynamic forces. It models the universe using a sufficiently large number of test particles that represent ordinary matter or dark matter. Gadget-2 is a perfect application for I/O and communication tests because of the finer granularity of communications that is involved.

NPB is a benchmark suite that consists of scientific kernels derived from Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) applications [26]. These kernels measure the performance for computational aspects like integer or floating-point arithmetic and complex matrix operations, and for communication aspects like unstructured adaptive meshes, parallel I/O, and irregular latencies between processors. We used four different kernels, namely CG, EP, FT, and IS, for evaluation purposes. Each of these kernels represents a distinctive application class and was used in a wide variety of large-scale scientific applications like oil reservoir simulations and particle-based simulations.


Configuration

Benchmark

Application Class




Platform

C

Java


Single Node

STREAM

PARSEC


Sysbench

System bandwidth

Fluid-dynamics

OLTP transactions










Cluster

HPL

NPB


Gadget-2

Linear Algebra

HPC Kernels

n-nody cosmological simulation












Table 1: Summary of evaluation benchmarks used for each platform


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