Scalable and Locality-aware Resource Management with Task Assembly Objects
Paper i proceeding, 2015

Efficiently scheduling application concurrency to system level resources is one of the main challenges in parallel computing. Current approaches based on mapping single-threaded tasks to individual cores via worksharing or random work stealing suffer from bottlenecks such as idleness, work time inflation and/or scheduling overheads. This paper proposes an execution model called Task Assembly Objects (TAO) that targets scalability and communication avoidance on future shared-memory architectures. The main idea behind TAO is to map coarse work units (i.e., task DAG partitions) to coarse hardware (i.e., system topology partitions) via a new construct called a task assembly: a nested parallel computation that aggregates fine-grained tasks and cores, and is managed by a private scheduler. By leveraging task assemblies via two-level global-private scheduling, TAO simplifies resource management and exploits multiple levels of locality. To test the TAO model, we present a software prototype called go:TAO and evaluate it with two benchmarks designed to stress load balancing and data locality. Our initial experiments give encouraging results for achieving scalability and communication-avoidance in future multi-core environments.

Författare

Miquel Pericas

Chalmers, Data- och informationsteknik, Datorteknik

Workshop on Runtime Systems for Extreme Scale Programming Models and Architectures (RESPA'15)

Ämneskategorier

Datorteknik

Styrkeområden

Informations- och kommunikationsteknik

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2017-10-08