7.6 KiB
TAMPI model
The Task-Aware MPI (TAMPI) library extends the functionality of standard MPI libraries by providing new mechanisms for improving the interoperability between parallel task-based programming models, such as OpenMP and OmpSs-2, and MPI communications. This library allows the safe and efficient execution of MPI operations from concurrent tasks and guarantees the transparent management and progress of these communications.
The TAMPI library has instrumented the execution of its task-aware functions
with ovni. To obtain an instrumented library, TAMPI must be built passing the
--with-ovni
configure option and specifying the ovni installation prefix. At
run-time, the user can enable the instrumentation by defining the environment
variable TAMPI_INSTRUMENT=ovni
.
For more information regarding TAMPI or how to enable its instrumentation see the TAMPI repository and documentation.
TAMPI is instrumented to track the execution path inside the run-time library to identify what is happening at each moment. This information can be used by both users and developers to analyze problems or to better understand the execution behavior of TAMPI communications and its background services. There is one view generated to achieve this goal.
Subsystem view
The subsystem view attempts to provide a general overview of what TAMPI is doing at any point in time. The view shows the state inside the TAMPI library for each thread (and for each CPU, the state of the running thread in that CPU). This subsystem state view sticks to the definition of subsystem states from the Nanos6.
The states shown in this view are:
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Library code subsystem: Indicating whether the running thread is executing effective TAMPI library code. These subsystem states wrap the rest of subsystems that are described below. No other TAMPI state can appear outside of a TAMPI library code subsystem state.
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Interface function: Running any TAMPI API function or an intercepted MPI function which requires task-awareness. When the user application disables a TAMPI mode, whether the blocking or non-blocking mode, any call to an interface function corresponding to the disabled mode will not appear in the view. Operations that are directly forwarded to MPI (because TAMPI is not asked to apply task-awareness) will not appear.
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Polling function: The TAMPI library can launch internal tasks to execute polling functions in the background. Currently, TAMPI launches a polling task that periodically checks and processes the pending MPI requests generated by task-aware operations. This polling state may not appear if none of the TAMPI modes are enabled by the user application.
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Communication subsystem: The running thread is communicating through MPI or issuing an asynchronous communication operation.
- Issuing a non-blocking operation: Issuing a non-blocking MPI operation that can generate an MPI request.
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Ticket subsystem: Creation and managing of tickets. A ticket is an internal object that describes the relation between a set of pending MPI requests and the user communication task that is waiting (synchronous or asynchronously) on them. A ticket is used for both blocking and non-blocking operations.
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Creating a ticket: Creating a ticket that is linked to a set of MPI requests and a user task. The user task is the task that is waiting for these requests to complete. Notice that waiting does not mean that the task will synchronously wait for them. The ticket is initialized with a counter of how many requests are still pending. The ticket is completed, and thus, the task is notified, when this counter becomes zero.
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Waiting for the ticket completion: The user task, during a blocking TAMPI operation, is waiting a ticket and its requests to complete. The task may be blocked and yield the CPU meanwhile. Notice that user tasks calling non-blocking TAMPI operations will not enter in this state.
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Staging queue subsystem: Queueing and dequeueing requests from the staging queues before being transferred to the global array of requests and tickets. These queues are used to optimize and control insertion of these objects into the global array.
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Adding to a queue: A user communication task running a task-aware TAMPI operation is pushing the corresponding MPI requests and the related ticket into a staging queue.
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Transfering from queues to the global array: The polling task is transferring the staged requests and tickets from the queues to the global array.
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Global array subsystem: Managing the per-process global array of tickets and MPI requests related to TAMPI operations.
- Checking pending requests: Testing all pending MPI requests from the global array, processing the completed requests, and reorganizing the array to keep it compacted.
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Request subsystem: Management and testing of pending MPI requests, and processing the completed ones. This state considers only the management of MPI requests concerning task-aware operations, which are exclusively tested by the TAMPI library. Any testing function call made by the user application or other libraries is not considered.
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Testing a request with MPI_Test: Testing a single MPI request by calling MPI_Test inside the TAMPI library.
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Testing requests with MPI_Testall: Testing multiple MPI requests by calling MPI_Testall inside the TAMPI library.
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Testing requests with MPI_Testsome: Testing multiple MPI requests by calling MPI_Testsome inside the TAMPI library.
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Processing a completed request: Processing a completed MPI request by decreasing the number of pending requests of the linked ticket. If the ticket does not have any other request to wait, the ticket is completed and the waiting task is notified. In such a case, a call to the tasking runtime system will occur. If the operation was blocking, the waiting task will be unblocked and will eventually resume the execution. If the operation was non-blocking, the library will decrease the external events of the waiting task.
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The figure below shows an example of the subsystem view. The program executes a distributed stencil algorithm with MPI and OmpSs-2. There are several MPI processes and each process has OmpSs-2 tasks running exlusively on multiple CPU resources.
The view show there are several user tasks running task-aware communication operations. The light blue areas show when a user task is testing a request that was generated by a non-blocking MPI communication function. There is also one polling task per process. The yellow areas show when the polling tasks are calling MPI_Testsome. Just after the testsome call, the violet areas show the moment when the polling task is processing the completed requests.
This view shows that most of the time inside the TAMPI library is spent testing requests. This could give us a clue that the underlying MPI library may have concurrency issues (e.g., thread contention) when multiple threads try to test requests in parallel.