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Combinatorial Scientific Computing: Experiences, Directions, and Challenges

Combinatorial Scientific Computing: Experiences, Directions, and Challenges. John R. Gilbert University of California, Santa Barbara DOE CSCAPES Workshop June 11, 2008. Support: DOE Office of Science, DARPA, SGI, MIT Lincoln Labs. Combinatorial Scientific Computing.

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Combinatorial Scientific Computing: Experiences, Directions, and Challenges

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  1. Combinatorial Scientific Computing: Experiences, Directions, and Challenges John R. Gilbert University of California, Santa Barbara DOE CSCAPES Workshop June 11, 2008 Support: DOE Office of Science, DARPA, SGI, MIT Lincoln Labs

  2. Combinatorial Scientific Computing “I observed that most of the coefficients in our matrices were zero; i.e., the nonzeros were ‘sparse’ in the matrix, and that typically the triangular matrices associated with the forward and back solution provided by Gaussian elimination would remain sparse if pivot elements were chosen with care” - Harry Markowitz, describing the 1950s work on portfolio theory that won the 1990 Nobel Prize for Economics

  3. Combinatorial Scientific Computing “The emphasis on mathematical methods seems to be shifted more towards combinatorics and set theory – and away from the algorithm of differential equations which dominates mathematical physics.” - John von Neumann & Oskar Morgenstern, 1944

  4. Combinatorial Scientific Computing “Combinatorial problems generated by challenges in data mining and related topics are now central to computational science. Finally, there’s the Internet itself, probably the largest graph-theory problem ever confronted.” - Isabel Beichl & Francis Sullivan, 2008

  5. A few directions in CSC • Hybrid discrete & continuous computations • Multiscale combinatorial computation • Analysis, management, and propagation of uncertainty • Economic & game-theoretic considerations • Computational biology & bioinformatics • Computational ecology • Knowledge discovery & machine learning • Relationship analysis • Web search and information retrieval • Sparse matrix methods • Geometric modeling • . . .

  6. Ten Challenges in Combinatorial Scientific Computing

  7. #1: The Parallelism Challenge Two Nvidia 8800 GPUs > 1 TFLOPS LANL / IBM Roadrunner > 1 PFLOPS Intel 80-core chip > 1 TFLOPS • Different programming models • Different levels of fit to irregular problems & graph algorithms

  8. #2: The Architecture Challenge • The memory wall: Most of memory is hundreds or thousands of cycles away from the processor that wants it. • Computations that follow the edges of irregular graphs are unavoidably latency-limited. • Speed of light: “You can buy more bandwidth, but you can’t buy less latency.” • Some help from encapsulating coarse-grained primitives in carefully-tuned library routines. . . • . . . but the difficulty is intrinsic to most graph computations, hence can likely only be addressed by machine architecture.

  9. An architectural approach: Cray MTA / XMT • Hide latency by massive multithreading • Per-tick context switching • Slower clock rate • Uniform (sort of) memory access time • But the economic case is less than completely clear….

  10. #3: The Algorithms Challenge • Efficient sequential algorithms for combinatorial problems often follow long sequential dependencies. • Example: Assefaw’s talk on graph coloring • Several parallelization strategies exist, but no silver bullet: • Partitioning (e.g. for coloring) • Pointer-jumping (e.g. for connected components) • Sometimes it just depends on the graph . . . .

  11. Sample kernel: Sort logically triangular matrix • Used in sparse linear solvers (e.g. Matlab’s) • Simple kernel, abstracts many other graph operations (see next) • Sequential: linear time; greedy topological sort; no locality • Parallel: very unbalanced; one DAG level per step; possible long sequential dependencies Permuted to upper triangular form Original matrix

  12. Matching in bipartite graph 1 2 3 4 5 1 4 1 5 2 2 3 3 3 1 4 2 4 5 PA 5 1 2 3 4 5 • Perfect matching: set of edges that hits each vertex exactly once • Matrix permutation to put nonzeros on diagonal • Variant: Maximum-weight matching 1 2 3 4 5 A

  13. Strongly connected components 1 2 4 7 5 3 6 1 2 2 1 4 7 5 4 5 7 3 6 6 3 • Symmetric permutation to block triangular form • Diagonal blocks are strong Hall (irreducible / strongly connected) • Sequential: linear time by depth-first search [Tarjan] • Parallel:divide & conquer algorithm, performance depends on input [Fleischer, Hendrickson, Pinar] G(A) PAPT

  14. Strong components of 1M-vertex RMAT graph

  15. Coloring for parallel nonsymmetric preconditioning [Aggarwal, Gibou, G] 263 million DOF • Level set method for multiphase interface problems in 3D. • Nonsymmetric-structure, second-order-accurate octree discretization. • BiCGSTAB preconditioned by parallel triangular solves.

  16. #4: The Primitives Challenge Peak BLAS 3 BLAS 2 BLAS 1 BLAS 3 (n-by-n matrix-matrix multiply) BLAS 2 (n-by-n matrix-vector multiply) BLAS 1 (sum of scaled n-vectors) • By analogy to numerical linear algebra, • What would the combinatorial BLAS look like?

  17. Primitives for HPC graph programming • Visitor-based multithreaded – MTGL + XMT + search templates natural for many algorithms + relatively simple load balancing – complex thread interactions, race conditions – unclear how applicable to standard architectures • Array-based data parallel – GAPDT + parallel Matlab / Python + relatively simple control structure + user-friendly interface – some algorithms hard to express naturally – load balancing not so easy • Scan-based vectorized – NESL: something of a wild card • We don’t really know the right set of primitives yet!

  18. Graph algorithms study [Kepner, Fineman, Kahn, Robinson]

  19. “Graph Algorithms in the Language of Linear Algebra” Graph Algorithms in the Language of Linear Algebra Jeremy Kepner and John R. Gilbert (editors) • Editors: Kepner (MIT-LL) and Gilbert (UCSB) • Contributors • Bader (GA Tech) • Buluc (UCSB) • Chakrabarti (CMU) • Dunlavy (Sandia) • Faloutsos (CMU) • Fineman (MIT-LL & MIT) • Gilbert (UCSB) • Kahn (MIT-LL & Brown) • Kegelmeyer (Sandia) • Kepner (MIT-LL) • Kleinberg (Cornell) • Kolda (Sandia) • Leskovec (CMU) • Madduri (GA Tech) • Robinson (MIT-LL & NEU) • Shah (ISC & UCSB)

  20. Multiple-source breadth-first search 2 1 4 5 7 6 3 AT X

  21. Multiple-source breadth-first search 2 1 4 5 7 6 3  AT X ATX

  22. Multiple-source breadth-first search 2 1 4 5 7 6 3  • Sparse array representation => space efficient • Sparse matrix-matrix multiplication => work efficient • Load balance depends on SpGEMM implementation • Not a panacea for the memory latency wall! AT X ATX

  23. SpGEMM: Sparse Matrix x Sparse Matrix [Buluc, G] • Shortest path calculations (APSP) • Betweenness centrality • BFS from multiple source vertices • Subgraph / submatrix indexing • Graph contraction • Cycle detection • Multigrid interpolation & restriction • Colored intersection searching • Applying constraints in finite element computations • Context-free parsing

  24. Parallel dense case Parallel Efficiency: 1-D Layout: 2-D Layout: • In the dense case, 2-D scales better with the number of processors • Turns out to be same for the sparse case. . . . p(0,0) p(0,1) p(0,2) p(1,0) p(1,1) p(1,2) p(2,0) p(2,1) p(2,2) Should be zero for perfect efficiency

  25. Upper bounds on speedup, sparse 1-D & 2-D[ICPP’08] 2-D algorithm 1-D algorithm N N P P • 1-D algorithms do not scale beyond 40x • Break-even point is around 50 processors.

  26. 2-D example: Sparse SUMMA Bkj j k k * = i Cij Aik • Cij+= Aik* Bkj • Based on dense SUMMA • Generalizes to nonsquare matrices, etc.

  27. Submatrices are hypersparse (i.e. nnz << n) nnz’ = blocks Average of c nonzeros per column Total Storage: blocks • A data structure or algorithm that depends on the matrix dimension n (e.g. CSR or CSC) is asymptotically too wasteful for submatrices

  28. Complexity measure trends with increasing p Standard algorithm is O(nnz+ flops+n) flops nnz n

  29. #5: The Libraries Challenge • The software version of the primitives challenge! • What languages, libraries, and environments will support combinatorial scientific computing? • Zoltan, (P)BGL, MTGL, . . . .

  30. SNAP [Bader & Madduri]

  31. Layer 1: Graph Theoretic Tools Graph operations Global structure of graphs Graph partitioning and clustering Graph generators Visualization and graphics Scan and combining operations Utilities GAPDT: Toolbox for graph analysis and pattern discovery[G, Reinhardt, Shah]

  32. Sample application stack Computational ecology, CFD, data exploration Applications CG, BiCGStab, etc. + combinatorial preconditioners (AMG, Vaidya) Preconditioned Iterative Methods Graph querying & manipulation, connectivity, spanning trees, geometric partitioning, nested dissection, NNMF, . . . Graph Analysis & PD Toolbox Arithmetic, matrix multiplication, indexing, solvers (\, eigs) Distributed Sparse Matrices

  33. Landscape connectivity modeling • Habitat quality, gene flow, corridor identification, conservation planning • Pumas in southern California: 12 million nodes, < 1 hour • Targeting larger problems: Yellowstone-to-Yukon corridor Figures courtesy of Brad McRae, NCEAS

  34. #6: The Productivity Challenge “Once we settled down on it, it was sort of like digging the Panama Canal - one shovelful at a time.” - Ken Appel (& Wolfgang Haken), 1976

  35. Productivity Raw performance isn’t always the only criterion. Other factors include: • Seamless scaling from desktop to HPC • Interactive response for exploration and visualization • Rapid prototyping • Usability by non-experts • Just plain programmability

  36. Interactive graph viz [Hollerer & Trethewey] • Nonlinearly-scaled breadth-first search • Distant vertices stay put, selected vertex moves to place • Real-time click&drag for moderately large graphs

  37. Click, Drag, & Smooth

  38. #7: The Data Size Challenge “Can we understand anything interesting about our data when we do not even have time to read all of it?” - Ronitt Rubinfeld

  39. Issues in (many) large graph applications • Where does the graph live? Disk or memory? • Often want approximate answers from sampling • Multiple simultaneous queries to same graph • Graph may be fixed, or slowly changing • Throughput and response time both important • Dynamic subsetting • User needs to solve problem on “my own” version of the main graph • E.g. landscape data masked by geographic location, filtered by obstruction type, resolved by species of interest

  40. Factoring network flow behavior [Karpinski, Almeroth, Belding, G]

  41. NMF traffic analysis results

  42. #8: The Uncertainty Challenge • “Discrete” quantities may be probability distributions • May want to manage and quantify uncertainty between multiple levels of modeling • May want to statistically sample too-large data, or extrapolate probabilistically from incomplete data • For example, in graph algorithms: • The graph itself may not be known with certainty • Vertex / edge labels may be stochastic • May want analysis of sensitivities or thresholds

  43. Horizontal-vertical decomposition ofdynamical systems [Mezic et al.]

  44. Propagation of uncertainty Stable and unstable directions at multiple scales? How to identify functional vs regulatory components?

  45. Model reduction and graph decomposition Spectral graph decomposition technique combined with dynamical systems analysis leads to deconstruction of a possibly unknown network into inputs, outputs, forward and feedback loops and allows identification of a minimal functional unit(MFU)of a system. Additional functional requirements Allows identification of roles of different feedback loops Level of output For MFU Minimal functional units: sensitive edges (leading to lack of production) easily identifiable Level of output with feedback loops Approach: • Decompose networks • Propagate uncertainty through components • Iteratively aggregate component uncertainty Output, execution Trim the network, preserve dynamics! (node 4 and several connections pruned, with no loss of performance) H-V decomposition Feedback loops Forward, production unit Input, initiator Mezic group, UCSB

  46. Larval connectivity

  47. Regional ocean modeling + particle advection

  48. Connectivity matrix (conditional probabilities)

  49. Future: Desired state

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