2021-03-12 19:33:40 +01:00
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# This file defines an experiment. It is designed as a function that takes
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# several parameters and returns a derivation. This derivation, when built will
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# create several scripts that can be executed and launch the experiment.
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# These are the inputs to this function: an attribute set which must contain the
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# following keys:
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{
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stdenv
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2022-09-01 16:27:29 +02:00
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, lib
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2021-03-12 19:33:40 +01:00
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, stdexp
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, bsc
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, targetMachine
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, stages
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, garlicTools
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}:
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2022-09-01 16:27:29 +02:00
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# We import in the scope the content of the `lib` attribute, which
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2021-03-12 19:33:40 +01:00
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# contain useful functions like `toString`, which will be used later. This is
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# handy to avoid writting `lib.tostring`.
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2021-03-12 19:33:40 +01:00
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2022-09-01 16:27:29 +02:00
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with lib;
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2021-03-12 19:33:40 +01:00
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# We also have some functions specific to the garlic benchmark which we import
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# as well. Take a look at the garlic/tools.nix file for more details.
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with garlicTools;
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# The `let` keyword allows us to define some local variables which will be used
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# later. It works as the local variable concept in the C language.
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let
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# Initial variable configuration: every attribute in this set contains lists
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# of options which will be used to compute the configuration of the units. The
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# cartesian product of all the values will be computed.
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varConf = {
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# In this case we will vary the columns and rows of the blocksize. This
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# configuration will create 3 x 2 = 6 units.
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cbs = [ 256 1024 4096 ];
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rbs = [ 512 1024 ];
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};
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# Generate the complete configuration for each unit: genConf is a function
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# that accepts the argument `c` and returns a attribute set. The attribute set
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# is formed by joining the configuration of the machine (which includes
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# details like the number of nodes or the architecture) and the configuration
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# that we define for our units.
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#
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# Notice the use of the `rec` keyword, which allows us to access the elements
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# of the set while is being defined.
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genConf = c: targetMachine.config // rec {
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# These attributes are user defined, and thus the user will need to handle
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# them manually. They are not read by the standard pipeline:
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# Here we load the `hw` attribute from the machine configuration, so we can
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# access it, for example, the number of CPUs per socket as hw.cpusPerSocket.
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hw = targetMachine.config.hw;
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# These options will be used by the heat app, be we write them here so they
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# are stored in the unit configuration.
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timesteps = 10;
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cols = 1024 * 16; # Columns
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rows = 1024 * 16; # Rows
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# The blocksize is set to the values passed in the `c` parameter, which will
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# be set to one of all the configurations of the cartesian product. for
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# example: cbs = 256 and rbs = 512.
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# We can also write `inherit (c) cbs rbs`, as is a shorthand notation.
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cbs = c.cbs;
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rbs = c.rbs;
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# The git branch is specified here as well, as will be used when we specify
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# the heat app
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gitBranch = "garlic/tampi+isend+oss+task";
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# -------------------------------------------------------------------------
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# These attributes are part of the standard pipeline, and are required for
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# each experiment. They are automatically recognized by the standard
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# execution pipeline.
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# The experiment name:
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expName = "example-granularity-heat";
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# The experimental unit name. It will be used to create a symlink in the
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# index (at /gpfs/projects/bsc15/garlic/$USER/index/) so you can easily find
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# the unit. Notice that the symlink is overwritten each time you run a unit
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# with the same same.
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#
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# We use the toString function to convert the numeric value of cbs and rbs
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# to a string like: "example-granularity-heat.cbs-256.rbs-512"
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unitName = expName +
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".cbs-${toString cbs}" +
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".rbs-${toString rbs}";
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# Repeat the execution of each unit a few times: this option is
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# automatically taken by the experiment, which will repeat the execution of
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# the program that many times. It is recommended to run the app at least 30
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# times, but we only used 10 here for demostration purposes (as it will be
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# faster to run)
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loops = 10;
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# Resources: here we configure the resources in the machine. The queue to be
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# used is `debug` as is the fastest for small jobs.
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qos = "debug";
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# Then the number of MPI processes or tasks per node:
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ntasksPerNode = 1;
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# And the number of nodes:
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nodes = 1;
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# We use all the CPUs available in one socket to each MPI process or task.
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# Notice that the number of CPUs per socket is not specified directly. but
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# loaded from the configuration of the machine that will be used to run our
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# experiment. The affinity mask is set accordingly.
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cpusPerTask = hw.cpusPerSocket;
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# The time will limit the execution of the program in case of a deadlock
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time = "02:00:00";
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# The job name will appear in the `squeue` and helps to identify what is
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# running. Currently is set to the name of the unit.
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jobName = unitName;
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};
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# Using the `varConf` and our function `genConf` we compute a list of the
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# complete configuration of every unit.
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configs = stdexp.buildConfigs {
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inherit varConf genConf;
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};
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# Now that we have the list of configs, we need to write how that information
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# is used to run our program. In our case we will use some params such as the
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# number of rows and columns of the input problem or the blocksize as argv
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# values.
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# The exec stage is used to run a program with some arguments.
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exec = {nextStage, conf, ...}: stages.exec {
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# All stages require the nextStage attribute, which is passed as parameter.
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inherit nextStage;
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# Then, we fill the argv array with the elements that will be used when
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# running our program. Notice that we load the attributes from the
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# configuration which is passed as argument as well.
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argv = [
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"--rows" conf.rows
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"--cols" conf.cols
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"--rbs" conf.rbs
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"--cbs" conf.cbs
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"--timesteps" conf.timesteps
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];
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# This program requires a file called `head.conf` in the current directory.
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# To do it, we run this small script in the `pre` hook, which simple runs
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# some commands before running the program. Notice that this command is
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# executed in every MPI task.
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pre = ''
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ln -sf ${nextStage}/etc/heat.conf heat.conf || true
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'';
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};
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# The program stage is only used to specify which program we should run.
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# We use this stage to specify build-time parameters such as the gitBranch,
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# which will be used to fetch the source code. We use the `override` function
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# of the `bsc.garlic.apps.heat` derivation to change the input paramenters.
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program = {nextStage, conf, ...}: bsc.garlic.apps.heat.override {
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inherit (conf) gitBranch;
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};
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# Other stages may be defined here, in case that we want to do something
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# additional, like running the program under `perf stats` or set some
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# envionment variables.
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# Once all the stages are defined, we build the pipeline array. The
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# `stdexp.stdPipeline` contains the standard pipeline stages, so we don't need
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# to specify them. We only specify how we run our program, and what program
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# exactly, by adding our `exec` and `program` stages:
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pipeline = stdexp.stdPipeline ++ [ exec program ];
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# Then, we use the `configs` and the `pipeline` just defined inside the `in`
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# part, to build the complete experiment:
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in
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# The `stdexp.genExperiment` function generates an experiment by calling every
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# stage of the pipeline with the different configs, and thus creating
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# different units. The result is the top level derivation which is the
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# `trebuchet`, which is the script that, when executed, launches the complete
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# experiment.
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stdexp.genExperiment { inherit configs pipeline; }
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