A Fault-Tolerance Protocol for Parallel Applications with Communication Imbalance
Resumo
The predicted failure rates of future supercomputers loom the groundbreaking research large machines are expected to foster. Therefore, resilient extreme-scale applications are an absolute necessity to effectively use the new generation of supercomputers. Rollback-recovery techniques have been traditionally used in HPC to provide resilience. Among those techniques, message logging provides the appealing features of saving energy, accelerating recovery, and having low performance penalty. Its increased memory consumption is, however, an important downside. This paper introduces memory-constrained message logging (MCML), a general framework for decreasing the memory footprint of message-logging protocols. In particular, we demonstrate the effectiveness of MCML in maintaining message logging feasible for applications with substantial communication imbalance. This type of applications appear in many scientific fields. We present experimental results with several parallel codes running on up to 4,096 cores. Using those results and an analytical model, we predict MCML can reduce execution time up to 25% and energy consumption up to 15%, at extreme scale.
Palavras-chave:
Protocols, Synchronization, Fault tolerance, Fault tolerant systems, Supercomputers, Receivers, High performance computing, fault tolerance, message logging, communication imbalance
Publicado
18/10/2015
Como Citar
MENESES, Esteban; KALÉ, Laxmikant V..
A Fault-Tolerance Protocol for Parallel Applications with Communication Imbalance. In: INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE AND HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING (SBAC-PAD), 27. , 2015, Florianópolis/SC.
Anais [...].
Porto Alegre: Sociedade Brasileira de Computação,
2015
.
p. 162-169.
