Publication

Aspen-based performance and energy modeling frameworks

Citation

Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing 120: 222-236 (2018)

Abstract

With the anticipation of exascale architectures, energy consumption is becoming one of the critical design parameters, especially in light of the energy budget of 20-30 Megawatts set by the U.S. Department of Energy. Understanding an application's execution pattern and its energy footprint is critical to improving application operation on a diverse heterogeneous architecture. Applying application-specific performance optimization can consequently improve energy consumption. However, this approach is only applicable to current systems. As we enter a new era of exascale architectures that is projected to contain more complex memory hierarchies, increased levels of parallelism, heterogeneity in hardware, and complex programming models and techniques, energy and performance management is getting more cumbersome. We therefore propose techniques that predict the energy consumption beforehand or at runtime to enable proactive tuning. Such energy prediction approaches must be generic and adapt themselves at runtime to changing application and hardware configurations. Most existing energy estimation and prediction approaches are empirical in nature and thus tied to current systems. To overcome this limitation, we propose two energy estimation techniques: ACEE (Algorithmic and Categorical Energy Estimation), which uses a combination of analytical and empirical modeling techniques; and AEEM (Aspen's Embedded Energy Estimation), a system-level analytical energy estimation technique. Both of these models incorporate the Aspen domain specific language for performance modeling. We present the methodologies of these two models and test their accuracy using five proxy applications. We also describe three use cases.

Read Publication

Last Updated: May 28, 2020 - 4:05 pm