Section outline

  • This course covers performance engineering approaches on the compute node level. Even application developers who are fluent in OpenMP and MPI often lack a good grasp of how much performance could at best be achieved by their code. This is because parallelism takes us only half the way to good performance. Even worse, slow serial code tends to scale very well, hiding the fact that resources are wasted. This course conveys the required knowledge to develop a thorough understanding of the interactions between software and hardware. This process must start at the core, socket, and node level, where the code gets executed that does the actual computational work. We introduce the basic architectural features and bottlenecks of modern processors and compute nodes. Pipelining, SIMD, superscalarity, caches, memory interfaces, ccNUMA, etc., are covered. A cornerstone of node-level performance analysis is the Roofline model, which is introduced in due detail and applied to various examples from computational science. We also show how simple software tools can be used to acquire knowledge about the system, run code in a reproducible way, and validate hypotheses about resource consumption. Finally, once the architectural requirements of a code are understood and correlated with performance measurements, the potential benefit of code changes can often be predicted, replacing hope-for-the-best optimizations by a scientific process.

    Lecturers: Georg Hager, Jan Eitzinger, Thomas Gruber, Dominik Ernst, and Gerhard Wellein, Erlangen National High Performance Computing Center

    Course date: January 11-13, 2023 (8:00 am - 4:00 pm EST)

    This course will be conducted online as a Zoom event. Details will be sent vie e-mail to registered participants.

    Course program:

    Introduction

    Computer architecture for software developers

    Tools topology & affinity in multicore environments

    Roofline model: basics

    Tools: hardware performance counters

    Roofline case studies

    Optimal use of parallel resources: SIMD and ccNUMA

    Performance Engineering basic skills

    Extending Roofline: The ECM performance model