The OpenMP cluster programming model

H Yviquel, M Pereira, E Francesquini… - … Proceedings of the …, 2022 - dl.acm.org
H Yviquel, M Pereira, E Francesquini, G Valarini, G Leite, P Rosso, R Ceccato
Workshop Proceedings of the 51st International Conference on Parallel Processing, 2022dl.acm.org
Despite the various research initiatives and proposed programming models, efficient
solutions for parallel programming in HPC clusters still rely on a complex combination of
different programming models (eg, OpenMP and MPI), languages (eg, C++ and CUDA), and
specialized runtimes (eg, Charm++ and Legion). On the other hand, task parallelism has
shown to be an efficient and seamless programming model for clusters. This paper
introduces OpenMP Cluster (OMPC), a task-parallel model that extends OpenMP for cluster …
Despite the various research initiatives and proposed programming models, efficient solutions for parallel programming in HPC clusters still rely on a complex combination of different programming models (e.g., OpenMP and MPI), languages (e.g., C++ and CUDA), and specialized runtimes (e.g., Charm++ and Legion). On the other hand, task parallelism has shown to be an efficient and seamless programming model for clusters. This paper introduces OpenMP Cluster (OMPC), a task-parallel model that extends OpenMP for cluster programming. OMPC leverages OpenMP’s offloading standard to distribute annotated regions of code across the nodes of a distributed system. To achieve that it hides MPI-based data distribution and load-balancing mechanisms behind OpenMP task dependencies. Given its compliance with OpenMP, OMPC allows applications to use the same programming model to exploit intra- and inter-node parallelism, thus simplifying the development process and maintenance. We evaluated OMPC using Task Bench, a synthetic benchmark focused on task parallelism, comparing its performance against other distributed runtimes. Experimental results show that OMPC can deliver up to 1.53x and 2.43x better performance than Charm++ on CCR and scalability experiments, respectively. Experiments also show that OMPC performance weakly scales for both Task Bench and a real-world seismic imaging application.
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