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Balar: A SST GPU Component for Performance Modeling and Profiling
Author(s) -
Clayton Hughes,
Simon David Hammond,
Robert J. Hoekstra,
Mengchi Zhang,
Mahmoud Khairy,
Timothy G. Rogers,
Roland Green
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1560919
Subject(s) - massively parallel , computer science , parallel computing , profiling (computer programming) , general purpose computing on graphics processing units , component (thermodynamics) , supercomputer , cuda , context (archaeology) , computational science , computer architecture , operating system , graphics , paleontology , physics , biology , thermodynamics
Programmable accelerators have become commonplace in modern computing systems. Advances in programming models and the availability of unprecedented amounts of data have created a space for massively parallel accelerators capable of maintaining context for thousands of concurrent threads resident on-chip. These threads are grouped and interleaved on a cycle-by-cycle basis among several massively parallel computing cores. One path for the design of future supercomputers relies on an ability to model the performance of these massively parallel cores at scale. The SST framework has been proven to scale up to run simulations containing tens of thousands of nodes. A previous report described the initial integration of the open-source, execution-driven GPU simulator, GPGPU-Sim, into the SST framework. This report discusses the results of the integration and how to use the new GPU component in SST. It also provides examples of what it can be used to analyze and a correlation study showing how closely the execution matches that of a Nvidia V100 GPU when running kernels and mini-apps.

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