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Improving the Performance of the Extreme-scale Simulator...

by Christian Engelmann, Thomas J Naughton Iii
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of the 18th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Distributed Simulation and Real Time Applications (DS-RT) 2014
Publication Date
Page Numbers
198 to 207
Conference Name
18th IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Distributed Simulation and Real Time Applications (DS-RT) 2014
Conference Location
Toulouse, France
Conference Date
-

Investigating the performance of parallel applications at scale on future high-performance computing (HPC) architectures and the performance impact of different architecture choices is an important component of HPC hardware/software co-design. The Extreme-scale Simulator (xSim) is a simulation-based toolkit for investigating the performance of parallel applications at scale. xSim scales to millions of simulated Message Passing Interface (MPI) processes. The overhead introduced by a simulation tool is an important performance and productivity aspect. This paper documents two improvements to xSim: (1) a new deadlock resolution protocol to reduce the parallel discrete event simulation management overhead and (2) a new simulated MPI message matching algorithm to reduce the oversubscription management overhead. The results clearly show a significant performance improvement, such as by reducing the simulation overhead for running the NAS Parallel Benchmark suite inside the simulator from 1,020\% to 238% for the conjugate gradient (CG) benchmark and from 102% to 0% for the embarrassingly parallel (EP) and benchmark, as well as, from 37,511% to 13,808% for CG and from 3,332% to 204% for EP with accurate process failure simulation.