Dense linear algebra on accelerated multicore hardware
High-Performance Scientific Computing: Algorithms and Applications, 2012•Springer
Abstract Design of systems exceeding 1 Pflop/s and inching towards 1 Eflop/s forced a
dramatic shift in hardware design. Various physical and engineering constraints resulted in
introduction of massive parallelism and functional hybridization with the use of accelerator
units. This paradigm change brings about a serious challenge for application developers as
the management of multicore proliferation and heterogeneity rests on software. And it is
reasonable to expect that this situation will not change in the foreseeable future. This …
dramatic shift in hardware design. Various physical and engineering constraints resulted in
introduction of massive parallelism and functional hybridization with the use of accelerator
units. This paradigm change brings about a serious challenge for application developers as
the management of multicore proliferation and heterogeneity rests on software. And it is
reasonable to expect that this situation will not change in the foreseeable future. This …
Abstract
Design of systems exceeding 1 Pflop/s and inching towards 1 Eflop/s forced a dramatic shift in hardware design. Various physical and engineering constraints resulted in introduction of massive parallelism and functional hybridization with the use of accelerator units. This paradigm change brings about a serious challenge for application developers as the management of multicore proliferation and heterogeneity rests on software. And it is reasonable to expect that this situation will not change in the foreseeable future. This chapter presents a methodology of dealing with this issue in three common scenarios. In the context of shared-memory multicore installations, we show how high performance and scalability go hand in hand when the well-known linear algebra algorithms are recast in terms of Direct Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) which are then transparently scheduled at runtime inside the Parallel Linear Algebra Software for Multicore Architectures (PLASMA) project. Similarly, Matrix Algebra on GPU and Multicore Architectures (MAGMA) schedules DAG-driven computations on multicore processors and accelerators. Finally, Distributed PLASMA (DPLASMA), takes the approach to distributed-memory machines with the use of automatic dependence analysis and the Direct Acyclic Graph Engine (DAGuE) to deliver high performance at the scale of many thousands of cores.
Springer
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