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Separating the wheat from the chaff
Author(s) -
Laura von Rüden,
Marc-André Hermanns,
Michael Behrisch,
Daniel A. Keim,
Bernd Mohr,
Felix Wolf
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
kops (university of konstanz)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2835238.2835242
Subject(s) - computer science , relevance (law) , visual analytics , focus (optics) , process (computing) , software , analytics , space (punctuation) , data analysis , quality (philosophy) , visualization , data science , theoretical computer science , machine learning , data mining , programming language , philosophy , physics , optics , epistemology , political science , law , operating system
Performance-analysis tools are indispensable for understanding and optimizing the behavior of parallel programs running on increasingly powerful supercomputers. However, with size and complexity of hardware and software on the rise, performance data sets are becoming so voluminous that their analysis poses serious challenges. In particular, the search space that must be traversed and the number of individual performance views that must be explored to identify phenomena of interest becomes too large. To mitigate this problem, we use visual analytics. Specifically, we accelerate the analysis of performance profiles by automatically identifying (1) relevant and (2) similar data subsets and their performance views. We focus on views of the virtual-process topology, showing that their relevance can be well captured with visual-quality metrics and that they can be further assigned to topical groups according to their visual features. A case study demonstrates that our approach helps reduce the search space by up to 80%

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