670 likes | 820 Vues
Profiling Tools In Ranger. Carlos Rosales, Kent Milfeld and Yaakoub Y. El Kharma carlos@tacc.utexas.edu. mpiP and IPM. SCALABILITY IN MPI APPLICATIONS. About mpiP. mpiP is an MPI P rofiling library mpip.sourceforge.net Scalable & Lightweight
E N D
Profiling Tools In Ranger Carlos Rosales, Kent Milfeld and Yaakoub Y. El Kharma carlos@tacc.utexas.edu
mpiP and IPM SCALABILITY IN MPI APPLICATIONS
About mpiP mpiP is an MPI Profiling library mpip.sourceforge.net • Scalable & Lightweight • Multiplatform • Linux IA32/IA64/x86_64/MPIS64 • IBM POWER 4/5 • Cray XT3/XT4/X1E • Does not require manual code instrumentation • collects statistics of MPI functions (wraps original MPI function calls) • less overhead than tracing tools • less data than tracing tools • Easy to use (requires linking but not compilation)
Using mpiP Load the mpiP module: % module load mpiP Link the static library before any others: % mpicc -g -L$TACC_MPIP_LIB -lmpiP -lbfd -liberty ./srcFile.c Set environmental variables controlling the mpiP output: % setenv MPIP ‘-t 10 -k 2’ In this case: -t 10 only callsites with time > 10% MPI time included in report -k 2 set callsite stack traceback depth to 2 Run program through the queue as usual.
mpiP runtime options (csh)% setenv MPIP ‘option1 option2 …’ (bash)% export MPIP=‘option1 option2 …’
mpiP calls from C/Fortran Generate arbitrary reports using the function call MPI_Pcontrol() with different arguments Useful to: • profile specific sections of the code • obtain individual profiles of multiple function calls
MPI_Pcontrol examples Scope limitation Individual reports switch(i) { case 5: MPI_Pcontrol(2); // reset profile data MPI_Pcontrol(1); // enable profiling break; case 6: MPI_Pcontrol(3); // generate verbose report MPI_Pcontrol(4); // generate concise report MPI_Pcontrol(0); // disable profiling break; default: break; } /* ... do something for one timestep ... */ switch(i) { case 5: MPI_Pcontrol(1);// enable profiling break; case 6: MPI_Pcontrol(0);// disable profiling break; default: break; } /* ... do something for one timestep ... */
mpiP output After running the executable a file with the extension .mpiP will be generated with: • MPI Time (MPI time for all MPI calls) • MPI callsites • Aggregate message size • Aggregate time For scalability analysis it is important to compare the total MPI time to the total running time of the application. Detailed function call data can be used to identify communication hotspots.
mpiP output: MPI Time --------------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- MPI Time (seconds) --------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Task AppTime MPITime MPI% 0 4.83 4.4 91.12 1 4.83 0.332 6.87 2 4.83 0.31 6.42 3 4.83 0.316 6.54 4 4.83 0.328 6.79 5 4.83 0.34 7.04 6 4.83 0.33 6.84 7 4.83 0.342 7.08 8 4.83 0.324 6.71 9 4.83 0.323 6.69 10 4.83 0.346 7.17 11 4.83 0.328 6.79 12 4.83 0.341 7.06 13 4.83 0.32 6.63 14 4.83 0.345 7.15 15 4.83 0.344 7.13 * 77.2 9.36 12.13
mpiP output: MPI Time This process seems to be controlling all MPI exchanges --------------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- MPI Time (seconds) --------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Task AppTime MPITime MPI% 0 4.83 4.4 91.12 1 4.83 0.332 6.87 2 4.83 0.31 6.42 3 4.83 0.316 6.54 4 4.83 0.328 6.79 5 4.83 0.34 7.04 6 4.83 0.33 6.84 7 4.83 0.342 7.08 8 4.83 0.324 6.71 9 4.83 0.323 6.69 10 4.83 0.346 7.17 11 4.83 0.328 6.79 12 4.83 0.341 7.06 13 4.83 0.32 6.63 14 4.83 0.345 7.15 15 4.83 0.344 7.13 * 77.2 9.36 12.13
mpiP output: MPI callsites ---------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- Callsites: 9 ---------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ID Lev File/Address Line Parent_Funct MPI_Call 1 0 matmultc.c 60 main Send 2 0 matmultc.c 52 main Bcast 3 0 matmultc.c 103 main Barrier 4 0 matmultc.c 78 main Send 5 0 matmultc.c 65 main Recv 6 0 matmultc.c 74 main Send 7 0 matmultc.c 98 main Send 8 0 matmultc.c 92 main Recv 9 0 matmultc.c 88 main Bcast
mpiP output: Aggregate time ---------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- Aggregate Time (top twenty, descending, milliseconds) ----------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Call Site Time App% MPI% COV Recv 5 4.19e+03 5.42 44.70 0.00 Bcast 9 4.12e+03 5.34 44.03 0.00 Recv 8 412 0.53 4.40 0.11 Barrier 3 229 0.30 2.45 0.79 Send 7 203 0.26 2.17 0.44 Bcast 2 174 0.23 1.86 0.00 Send 6 37 0.05 0.39 0.00 Send 1 0.473 0.00 0.01 0.00 Send 4 0.023 0.00 0.00 0.00
mpiP output: Aggregate time ---------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- Aggregate Time (top twenty, descending, milliseconds) ----------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Call Site Time App% MPI% COV Recv 5 4.19e+03 5.42 44.70 0.00 Bcast 9 4.12e+03 5.34 44.03 0.00 Recv 8 412 0.53 4.40 0.11 Barrier 3 229 0.30 2.45 0.79 Send 7 203 0.26 2.17 0.44 Bcast 2 174 0.23 1.86 0.00 Send 6 37 0.05 0.39 0.00 Send 1 0.473 0.00 0.01 0.00 Send 4 0.023 0.00 0.00 0.00
mpiP output: Message Size ---------------------------------------------------------------------- @--- Aggregate Sent Message Size (top twenty, descending, bytes) ----- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Call Site Count Total Avrg Sent% Bcast 9 30000 4.8e+08 1.6e+04 83.33 Send 7 2000 3.2e+07 1.6e+04 5.56 Bcast 2 2000 3.2e+07 1.6e+04 5.56 Send 6 1985 3.18e+07 1.6e+04 5.51 Send 1 15 2.4e+05 1.6e+04 0.04 Send 4 15 120 8 0.00
About IPM IPM is an Integrated Performance Monitoring tool http://ipm-hpc.sourceforge.net/ Portable profiling infrastructure for parallel codes Low-overhead performance summary of computing and communication IPM is a quick,easy andconcise profiling tool Requires no manual instrumentation, just adding the -g option to the compilation Produces XML output that is parsed by scripts to generate browser-readable html pages The level of detail it reports is lower than TAU, PAPI, HPCToolkit or Scalasca but higher than mpiP
Using IPM • Available on Ranger for both intel and pgi compilers, with mvapich and mvapich2 • Create ipm environment with module command before running code: % module load ipm • In your job script, set up the following ipm environment before the ibrun command:module load ipmexport LD_PRELOAD=$TACC_IPM_LIB/libipm.soexport IPM_REPORT=fullibrun <my executable> <my arguments>
Using IPM • export LD_PRELOAD=$TACC_IPM_LIB/libipm.so • must be inside job script to ensure the IPM wrappers for MPI calls are loaded properly • IPM_REPORT: controls the level of information collected • full • terse • none • IPM_MPI_THRESHOLD: Reports only routines using this percentage (or more) of MPI time. • e.g. “IPM_MPI_THRESHOLD 0.3” report subroutines that consume more than 30% of the total MPI time. • Important details: % module help ipm
Output from IPM When your code has finished running IPM will create an XML file with a name like: username.1231369287.321103.0 Get basic or full information in text mode using: % ipm_parse username.1231369287.321103.0 % ipm_parse -full username.1231369287.321103.0 You can also transform this XML file into standard HTML files : %ipm_parse -html username.1231369287.321103.0 This generates a directory which contains an index.html file readable by any web browser Tar this directory and scp the file to your own local computer to visualize the results
IPM: Text Output ##IPMv0.922############################################### # # command : /work/01125/yye00/ICAC/cactus_SandTank SandTank.par # host : i101-309/x86_64_Linux mpi_tasks : 32 on 2 nodes # start : 05/26/09/11:49:06 wallclock : 2.758892 sec # stop : 05/26/09/11:49:09 %comm : 2.01 # gbytes : 4.38747e+00 total gflop/sec : 9.39108e-02 total # ########################################################## # region : * [ntasks] = 32 # # [total] <avg> min max # entries 32 1 1 1 # wallclock 88.2742 2.75857 2.75816 2.75889 # user 5.51634 0.172386 0.148009 0.200012 # system 1.771 0.0553438 0.0536683 0.056717 # %comm 2.00602 1.94539 2.05615 # gflop/sec 0.0939108 0.00293471 0.00293338 0.002952 # gbytes 4.38747 0.137109 0.136581 0.144985 # # PAPI_FP_OPS 2.5909e+08 8.09655e+06 8.09289e+06 8.14685e+06 # PAPI_TOT_CYC 6.80291e+09 2.12591e+08 2.02236e+08 2.19109e+08 # PAPI_VEC_INS 5.95596e+08 1.86124e+07 1.85964e+07 1.8756e+07 # PAPI_TOT_INS 4.16377e+09 1.30118e+08 1.0987e+08 1.35676e+08 # # [time] [calls] <%mpi> <%wall> # MPI_Allreduce 0.978938 53248 55.28 1.11 # MPI_Comm_rank 0.316355 6002 17.86 0.36 # MPI_Barrier 0.247135 3680 13.95 0.28 # MPI_Allgatherv 0.16621 2848 9.39 0.19 # MPI_Bcast 0.0217298 576 1.23 0.02 # MPI_Allgather 0.0216982 672 1.23 0.02 # MPI_Recv 0.0186796 32 1.05 0.02 # MPI_Comm_size 0.000139921 2112 0.01 0.00 # MPI_Send 0.000115622 32 0.01 0.00 ###########################################################
timers, gprof BASIC PROFILING TOOLS
Timers: Command Line The command time is available in most Unix systems. It is simple to use (no code instrumentation required). Gives total execution time of a process and all its children in seconds. % /usr/bin/time -p ./exeFile real 9.95 user 9.86 sys 0.06 Leave out the -p option to get additional information: % time ./exeFile % 9.860u 0.060s 0:09.95 99.9% 0+0k 0+0io 0pf+0w
Timers: Code Section INTEGER :: rate, start, stop REAL :: time CALL SYSTEM_CLOCK(COUNT_RATE = rate) CALL SYSTEM_CLOCK(COUNT = start) ! Code to time here CALL SYSTEM_CLOCK(COUNT = stop) time = REAL( ( stop - start )/ rate ) #include <time.h> double start, stop, time; start = (double)clock()/CLOCKS_PER_SEC; /* Code to time here */ stop = (double)clock()/CLOCKS_PER_SEC; time = stop - start;
About GPROF GPROF is the GNU Project PROFiler. gnu.org/software/binutils/ Requires recompilation of the code. Compiler options and libraries provide wrappers for each routine call and periodic sampling of the program. A default gmon.out file is produced with the function call information. GPROF links the symbol list in the executable with the data in gmon.out.
Types of Profiles • Flat Profile • CPU time spend in each function (self and cumulative) • Number of times a function is called • Useful to identify most expensive routines • Call Graph • Number of times a function was called by other functions • Number of times a function called other functions • Useful to identify function relations • Suggests places where function calls could be eliminated • Annotated Source • Indicates number of times a line was executed
Profiling with gprof Use the -pg flag during compilation: % gcc -g -pg ./srcFile.c % icc -g -p ./srcFile.c % pgcc -g -pg ./srcFile.c Run the executable. An output file gmon.out will be generated with the profiling information. Execute gprof and redirect the output to a file: % gprof ./exeFile gmon.out > profile.txt % gprof –l ./exeFile gmon.out > profile_line.txt % gprof -A ./exeFile gmon.out > profile_anotated.txt
Flat profile In the flat profile we can identify the most expensive parts of the code (in this case, the calls to matSqrt, matCube, and sysCube). % cumulative self self total time seconds seconds calls s/call s/call name 50.00 2.47 2.47 2 1.24 1.24 matSqrt 24.70 3.69 1.22 1 1.22 1.22 matCube 24.70 4.91 1.22 1 1.22 1.22 sysCube 0.61 4.94 0.03 1 0.03 4.94 main 0.00 4.94 0.00 2 0.00 0.00 vecSqrt 0.00 4.94 0.00 1 0.00 1.24 sysSqrt 0.00 4.94 0.00 1 0.00 0.00 vecCube
Call Graph Profile index % time self children called name 0.00 0.00 1/1 <hicore> (8) [1] 100.0 0.03 4.91 1 main [1] 0.00 1.24 1/1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 1.22 0.00 1/1 sysCube [5] 1.22 0.00 1/1 matCube [4] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] 0.00 0.00 1/1 vecCube [7] ----------------------------------------------- 1.24 0.00 1/2 main [1] 1.24 0.00 1/2 sysSqrt [3] [2] 50.0 2.47 0.00 2 matSqrt [2] ----------------------------------------------- 0.00 1.24 1/1 main [1] [3] 25.0 0.00 1.24 1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] -----------------------------------------------
Visual Call Graph main sysSqrt matSqrt vecCube sysCube vecSqrt matCube
Call Graph Profile index % time self children called name 0.00 0.00 1/1 <hicore> (8) [1] 100.0 0.03 4.91 1 main [1] 0.00 1.24 1/1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 1.22 0.00 1/1 sysCube [5] 1.22 0.00 1/1 matCube [4] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] 0.00 0.00 1/1 vecCube [7] ----------------------------------------------- 1.24 0.00 1/2 main [1] 1.24 0.00 1/2 sysSqrt [3] [2] 50.0 2.47 0.00 2 matSqrt [2] ----------------------------------------------- 0.00 1.24 1/1 main [1] [3] 25.0 0.00 1.24 1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] -----------------------------------------------
Visual Call Graph main sysSqrt vecCube sysCube vecSqrt matCube matSqrt
Call Graph Profile index % time self children called name 0.00 0.00 1/1 <hicore> (8) [1] 100.0 0.03 4.91 1 main [1] 0.00 1.24 1/1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 1.22 0.00 1/1 sysCube [5] 1.22 0.00 1/1 matCube [4] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] 0.00 0.00 1/1 vecCube [7] ----------------------------------------------- 1.24 0.00 1/2 main [1] 1.24 0.00 1/2 sysSqrt [3] [2] 50.0 2.47 0.00 2 matSqrt [2] ----------------------------------------------- 0.00 1.24 1/1 main [1] [3] 25.0 0.00 1.24 1 sysSqrt [3] 1.24 0.00 1/2 matSqrt [2] 0.00 0.00 1/2 vecSqrt [6] -----------------------------------------------
Visual Call Graph main sysSqrt vecCube sysCube matCube matSqrt vecSqrt
PerfExpert, Tau Advanced Profiling Tools
Advanced Profiling Tools Not your problem!! • Can be intimidating: • Difficult to install • Many dependences • Require kernel patches • Useful for serial and parallel programs • Extensive profiling and scalability information • Analyze code using: • Timers • Hardware registers (PAPI) • Function wrappers
PAPI PAPI is a Performance Application Programming Interface icl.cs.utk.edu/papi • API to use hardware counters • Behind Tau, HPCToolkit • Multiplatform: • Most Intel & AMD chips • IBM POWER 4/5/6 • Cray X/XD/XT • Sun UltraSparc I/II/III • MIPS • SiCortex • Cell • Available as a module in Ranger
About PerfExpert Brand new tool, locally developed at UT Easy to use and understand Great for quick profiling and for beginners Provides recommendation on “what to fix” in a subroutine Collects information from PAPI using HPCToolkit No MPI specific profiling, no 3D visualization, no elaborate metrics Combines ease of use with useful interpretation of gathered performance data
Using PerfExpert • Load the papi and java modules:% module load papi% module load java • Copy the PerfExpert.sge submission script (for editing):cp /share/home/00976/burtsche/PerfExpert/PerfExpert.sge ./ • Edit the PerfExpert.sge script to ensure the correct executable name, correct directory, correct project name and so on. • Submit your job: % qsub PerfExpert.sge • To analyze results: /share/home/00976/burtsche/PerfExpert/PerfExpert <threshold> ./hpctoolkit-…. Typical value for threshold is 0.1
About Tau TAU is a suite of Tuning and Analysis Utilities www.cs.uoregon.edu/research/tau • 11+ year project involving • University of Oregon Performance Research Lab • LANL Advanced Computing Laboratory • Research Centre Julich at ZAM, Germany • Integrated toolkit • Performance instrumentation • Measurement • Analysis • Visualization
Using Tau • Load the papi and tau modules • Gather information for the profile run: • Type of run (profiling/tracing, hardware counters, etc…) • Programming Paradigm (MPI/OMP) • Compiler (Intel/PGI/GCC…) • Select the appropriate TAU_MAKEFILE based on your choices ($TAU/Makefile.*) • Set up the selected PAPI counters in your submission script • Run as usual & analyze using paraprof • You can transfer the database to your own PC to do the analysis