VM Requirements for X10

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Transcript VM Requirements for X10

X10: An Object-Oriented
Approach to Non-uniform Cluster
Computing
Vijay Saraswat
IBM Research
Overview

Introduction and context

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Language model and constructs
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
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Clustered Computing
Big picture
places, atomic, async, finish, clocks, arrays
Example programs and demo
Conclusion and Future Work
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
Guarantees
Challenges
July 23, 2003
IBM PL Day 2005
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Acknowledgements
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X10 core team
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Philippe Charles
Chris Donawa (IBM Toronto)
Kemal Ebcioglu
Christian Grothoff (Purdue)
Allan Kielstra (IBM Toronto)
Maged Michael
Christoph von Praun
Vivek Sarkar
Additional contributors to X10
ideas:
David Bacon, Bob Blainey, Perry
Cheng, Julian Dolby, Guang Gao (U
Delaware), Robert O'Callahan, Filip
Pizlo (Purdue), Lawrence Rauchwerger
(Texas A&M), Mandana Vaziri, Jan Vitek
(Purdue), V.T. Rajan, Radha
Jagadeesan (DePaul)
July 23, 2003
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X10 Tools
Julian Dolby, Steve Fink, Robert
Fuhrer, Matthias Hauswirth,
Peter Sweeney, Frank Tip,
Mandana Vaziri
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University partners:
MIT (StreamIt), Purdue University
(X10), UC Berkeley (StreamBit), U.
Delaware (Atomic sections), U.
Illinois (Fortran plug-in), Vanderbilt
University (Productivity metrics),
DePaul U (Semantics)
X10 PM+Tools Team Lead:
Kemal Ebcioglu, Vivek Sarkar
PERCS Principal Investigator:
Mootaz Elnozahy
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Performance and Productivity Challenges
1) Memory wall: Architectures exhibit
severe non-uniformities in bandwidth &
latency in memory hierarchy
Proc Cluster
PEs,
L1 $ .
.
PEs,
. L1 $
2) Frequency wall: Architectures introduce
hierarchical heterogeneous parallelism to
compensate for frequency scaling
slowdown
Clusters (scale-out)
Proc Cluster
...
PEs,
L1 $ .
.
PEs,
. L1 $
SMP
Multiple cores on a
chip
L2 Cache
L2 Cache
...
Coprocessors (SPUs)
SMTs
...
L3 Cache
Memory
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SIMD
...
ILPSoftware will need to
3) Scalability wall:
deliver ~ 105-way parallelism to utilize
peta-scale parallel systems
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Proc Cluster
Proc Cluster
PEs,
L1 $
..
PEs,
. L1 $
...
PEs,
L1 $
..
1995: entire chip can be accessed in 1 cycle
2010: only small fraction of chip can be accessed in 1 cycle
L2 Cache
L2 Cache
...
...
PEs,
. L1 $
\\
One billion transistors in a chip
High Complexity Limits Development Productivity
Major sources of complexity for application developer:
1) Severe non-uniformities in data accesses
2) Applications must exhibit large degrees of parallelism
(up to ~ 105 threads)
Complexity leads to increases in all
phases of HPC Software Lifecycle
related to parallel code
L3 Cache
Parallel
Specification
Source Code
Written
Specification
Algorithm
Development
//
Input Data
Requirements
Memory
Development of Parallel
Source Code --Design, Code,
Test, Port,
Scale, Optimize
//
Production
Runs of
Parallel Code
Maintenance and
Porting of Parallel Code
HPC Software Lifecycle
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PERCS Programming Model/Tools: Overall Architecture
Performance
Exploration
Productivity
Metrics
X10 source code
Java+Threads+Conc utils
X10
Development
Toolkit
Java
Development
Toolkit
C/C++ /MPI /OpenMP Fortran/MPI/OpenMP)
C
Development
Toolkit
Fortran
Development
Toolkit
...
...
Integrated Programming Environment: Edit, Compile, Debug, Visualize, Refactor
Use Eclipse platform (eclipse.org) as foundation for integrating tools
Morphogenic Software: separation of concerns, separation of roles
X10
Components
X10 runtime
Java
components
Java runtime
Fortran
components
Fast extern
interface
Fortran runtime
C/C++
components
C/C++ runtime
Integrated Concurrency Library: messages, synchronization, threads
PERCS = Productive
Easy-to-use Reliable
Computer Systems
Continuous Program Optimization (CPO)
PERCS System Software (K42)
PERCS System Hardware
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X10 Design Assumptions
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Productivity
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Axiom: OO provides proven baseline
productivity, maintenance, portability
benefits.
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Axiom: Design must rule out large
classes of errors (Type safe, Memory
safe, Pointer safe, Lock safe, Clock
safe …)
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Axiom: Design must support
incremental introduction of explicit
place types/remote operations.
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Axiom: PM must integrate with static
tools (Eclipse) -- flag performance
problems, refactor code, detect races.
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Axiom: PM must support automatic
static and dynamic optimization (CPO).
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Scalability
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Axiom: Programmer must have
explicit language constructs to deal
with non-uniformity of access.
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Axiom: Allow specification of a large
collection of activities.
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Axiom: A program must use
scalable synchronization constructs.
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Axiom: The runtime may implement
aggregate operations more
efficiently than user-specified
iterations with index variables.
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Axiom: The user may know more
than the compiler/RTS.
Support High Productivity (&, possibly U ) High
Performance Programmer
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The X10 Programming Model
Place
Place
Partitioned Global heap
Outbound
activities
Inbound
activities
Place-local heap
Granularity of
place can range
from single
register file to an
entire SMP system
Activities &
Activity-local storage
heap
stack
control
Place-local heap
...
Activities &
Activity-local storage
heap
...
stack
control
Partitioned Global heap
heap
stack
Inbound
activity
replies
Outbound
activity
replies
heap
...
control
stack
control
Immutable Data
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A program is a collection of places, each
containing resident data and a dynamic
place
collection of activities.
distribution
Program may distribute aggregate data
(arrays) across places during allocation.
Program may directly operate only on local
atomic, when
data, using atomic blocks.
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Program may spawn multiple (local or
remote) activities in parallel.
async, {at/for}each
Program must use asynchronous operations
to access/update remote data.
Program may detect termination or
(repeatedly) detect quiescence of a datadependent, distributed set of activities.
finish, clock
Cluster Computing: Common framework for P>=1
Shared Memory (P=1)
July 23, 2003
MPI (P > 1)
Formalized in Saraswat, Jagadeesan “Concurrent Clustered Programming”.
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async
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async PlaceExpressionSingleListopt Statement
async (P) S
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Parent activity creates a
new child activity at
place P, to execute
statement S; returns
immediately.
S may reference final
variables in enclosing
blocks.
double A[D]=…; // Global dist. array
final int k = …;
async ( A.distribution[99] ) {
// Executed at A[99]’s place
atomic A[99] = k;
}
cf Cilk’s spawn
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IBM PL Day 2005
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finish
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finish S
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Statement ::= finish Statement
Execute S, but wait until all
(transitively) spawned async’s
have terminated.
Trap all exceptions thrown by
spawned activities.
Throw an (aggregate)
exception if any spawned
async terminates abruptly.
finish ateach(point [i]:A) A[i] = i;
finish async(A.distribution[j]) A[j] = 2;
// All A[i]=i will complete before A[j]=2;
finish ateach(point [i]:A) A[i] = i;
finish async(A.distribution[j]) A[j] = 2;
// All A[i]=i will complete before A[j]=2;
Useful for expressing
“synchronous” operations
on remote data

And potentially, ordering
information in a weakly
consistent memory model
cf Cilk’s sync
Rooted Exception Model
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atomic
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Atomic blocks are
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Statement ::= atomic Statement
MethodModifier ::= atomic
Conceptually executed in a
single step, while other
activities are suspended
An atomic block may not
include
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Blocking operations
Accesses to data at remote
places
Creation of activities at
remote places
// target defined in lexically enclosing environment.
public atomic boolean CAS( Object old,
Object new) {
if (target.equals(old)) {
target = new;
return true;
}
return false;
}
// push data onto concurrent list-stack
Node<int> node=new Node<int>(17);
atomic { node.next = head; head = node; }
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when
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Statement ::= WhenStatement
WhenStatement ::= when ( Expression ) Statement
Activity suspends until a
state in which the guard is
true; in that state the body
is executed atomically.
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IBM PL Day 2005
class OneBuffer {
nullable Object datum = null;
boolean filled = false;
public
void send(Object v) {
when ( !filled ) {
this.datum = v;
this.filled = true;
}
}
public
Object receive() {
when ( filled ) {
Object v = datum;
datum = null;
filled = false;
return v;
}
}
}
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regions, distributions
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Region
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a (multi-dimensional) set of
indices
Distribution
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A mapping from indices to
places
High level algebraic
operations are provided on
regions and distributions
region R = 0:100;
region R1 = [0:100, 0:200];
region RInner = [1:99, 1:199];
// a local distribution
distribution D1=R-> here;
// a blocked distribution
distribution D = block(R);
// union of two distributions
distribution D = (0:1) -> P0 || (2:N) -> P1;
distribution DBoundary = D – RInner;
Based on ZPL.
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arrays
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Arrays may be
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Multidimensional
Distributed
Value types
Initialized in parallel:
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int [D] A= new int[D]
(point [i,j]) {return N*i+j;};
July 23, 2003
Array section
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A [RInner]
High level parallel array,
reduction and span operators
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Highly parallel library
implementation
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A-B (array subtraction)
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A.reduce(intArray.add,0)
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A.sum()
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ateach, foreach
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public boolean run() {
ateach (point p:A) S
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ateach ( FormalParam: Expression ) Statement
foreach ( FormalParam: Expression ) Statement
distribution D = distribution.factory.block(TABLE_SIZE);
Creates |region(A)| async
statements
Instance p of statement
S is executed at the
place where A[p] is
located
foreach (point p:R) S
 Creates |R| async
statements in parallel at
current place
Termination of all
activities can be ensured
using finish.
long[.] table = new long[D] (point [i]) { return i; }
long[.] RanStarts = new long[distribution.factory.unique()]
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(point [i]) { return starts(i);};
long[.] SmallTable = new long value[TABLE_SIZE]
(point [i]) {return i*S_TABLE_INIT;};
finish ateach (point [i] : RanStarts ) {
long ran = nextRandom(RanStarts[i]);
for (int count: 1:N_UPDATES_PER_PLACE) {
int J = f(ran);
long K = SmallTable[g(ran)];
async atomic table[J] ^= K;
ran = nextRandom(ran);
}}
return table.sum() == EXPECTED_RESULT;
}
IBM PL Day 2005
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clocks

async (P) clock (c1,…,cn)S
Operations
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clock c = new clock();
c.resume();
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Signals completion of work by
activity in this clock phase.
(c1,…,cn)
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next;
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Static Semantics
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Blocks until all clocks it is
registered on can advance.
Implicitly resumes all clocks.
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c.drop();
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Unregister activity with c.
(Clocked async): activity is
registered on the clocks
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Dynamic Semantics
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No explicit operation to register
a clock.
An activity may operate only on
those clocks it is live on.
In finish S,S may not
contain any top-level clocked
asyncs.
A clock c can advance only
when all its registered activities
have executed c.resume().
Supports over-sampling, hierarchical nesting.
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Example: SpecJBB
finish async {
clock c = new clock();
Company company = createCompany(...);
for (int w : 0:wh_num) for (int t: 0:term_num)
async clocked(c) { // a client
initialize;
next; //1.
while (company.mode!=STOP) {
select a transaction;
think;
process the transaction;
if (company.mode==RECORDING)
record data;
if (company.mode==RAMP_DOWN) {
c.resume(); //2.
}
}
gather global data;
} // a client
July 23, 2003
IBM PL Day 2005
// master activity
next; //1.
company.mode = RAMP_UP;
sleep rampuptime;
company.mode = RECORDING;
sleep recordingtime;
company.mode = RAMP_DOWN;
next; //2.
// All clients in RAMP_DOWN
company.mode = STOP;
} // finish
// Simulation completed.
print results.
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Formal semantics (FX10)
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Based on Middleweight
Java (MJ)
Configuration is a tree
of located processes
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Tree necessary for finish.
Clocks formalized using
short circuits (PODC
88).
Bisimulation semantics.
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Basic theorems
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Equational laws
Clock quiescence is
stable.
Monotonicity of places.
Deadlock freedom (for
language w/out when).
… Type Safety
… Memory Safety
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Current Status
09/03
PERCS
Kickoff
02/04
X10
Kickoff

07/04
X10
0.32
Spec
Draft
We have an operational X10 0.41
implementation

AllX10programs shown here run.
Grammar
Annotated
AST
AST
Analysis passes
Parser
02/05
Target
Java
Code emitter
X10
Multithreaded
RTS
Native
code
JVM
X10
source
X10
Prototype
#1
Structure
07/05
Code
Templates
X10
Productivity
Study
12/05
X10
Prototype #2
06/06
Open
Source
Release?
July 23, 2003
PEM
Events
Code metrics
•Translator based on
Polyglot (Java compiler
framework)
•X10 extensions are
modular.
•Uses Jikes parser
generator.
Limitations
•Parser: ~45/14K*
•Translator: ~112/9K
•RTS: ~190/10K
•Polyglot base: ~517/80K
•Approx 180 test cases.
(* classes+interfaces/LOC)
IBM PL Day 2005
Program
output
•Clocked final not yet
implemented.
•Type-checking
incomplete.
•No type inference.
•Implicit syntax not
supported.
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Future Work: Implementation
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Type checking/inference
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Lock assignment for
atomic sections
Data-race detection
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Batch activities into a
single thread.
Batch “small” messages.
Efficient implementation of
scan/reduce
Efficient invocation of
components in foreign
languages

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Dynamic, adaptive migration
of places from one
processor to another.
Continuous optimization
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Message aggregation
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Load-balancing
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Activity aggregation
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Clocked types
Place-aware types
Consistency
management
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C, Fortran
Garbage collection across
multiple places
Welcome University Partners and other collaborators.
July 23, 2003
IBM PL Day 2005
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Future work: Other topics

Design/Theory
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
Atomic blocks
Structural study of
concurrency and
distribution
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Clocked types
Hierarchical places
Weak memory model
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Tools
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Refactoring language.
Applications
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Persistence/Fault
tolerance
Database integration
Several HPC programs
planned currently.
Also: web-based
applications.
Welcome University Partners and other collaborators.
July 23, 2003
IBM PL Day 2005
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Backup material
Type system
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Value classes
May only have final
fields.
May only be subclassed
by value classes.
Instances of value
classes can be copied
freely between places.
nullable is a type
constructor


nullable T contains the
values of T and null.
Place types: T@P,
specify the place at
which the data object
lives.
Future work: Include generics and dependent types.
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IBM PL Day 2005
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Example: Latch
public class Latch implements future {
protected boolean forced = false;
protected nullable boxed result = null;
protected nullable exception z = null;
public interface future {
boolean forced();
Object force();
}
public class boxed {
nullable Object val;
}
public atomic
boolean setValue( nullable Object val,
nullable exception z ) {
if ( forced ) return false;
// these assignment happens only once.
this.result .val= val;
this.z = z;
this.forced = true;
return true;
public atomic boolean forced() {
return forced;
}
public Object force() {
when ( forced ) {
if (z != null) throw z;
return result;
}
}
}
July 23, 2003
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