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Case study

Case study. IBM Bluegene/L system InfiniBand. Interconnect Family share for 06/2011 top 500 supercomputers. Overview of the IBM Blue Gene/L System Architecture. Design objectives Hardware overview System architecture Node architecture Interconnect architecture. Highlights.

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Case study

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  1. Case study • IBM Bluegene/L system • InfiniBand

  2. Interconnect Family share for 06/2011 top 500 supercomputers

  3. Overview of the IBM Blue Gene/L System Architecture • Design objectives • Hardware overview • System architecture • Node architecture • Interconnect architecture

  4. Highlights • A 64K-node highly integrated supercomputer based on system-on-a-chip technology • Two ASICs • Blue Gene/L compute (BLC), Blue Gene/L Link (BLL) • Distributed memory, massively parallel processing (MPP) architecture. • Use the message passing programming model (MPI). • 360 Tflops peak performance • Optimized for cost/performance

  5. Design objectives • Objective 1: 360-Tflops supercomputer • Earth Simulator (Japan, fastest supercomputer from 2002 to 2004): 35.86 Tflops • Objective 2: power efficiency • Performance/rack = performance/watt * watt/rack • Watt/rack is a constant of around 20kW • Performance/watt determines performance/rack

  6. Power efficiency: • 360Tflops => 20 megawatts with conventional processors • Need low-power processor design (2-10 times better power efficiency)

  7. Design objectives (continue) • Objective 3: extreme scalability • Optimized for cost/performance  use low power, less powerful processors  need a lot of processors • Up to 65536 processors. • Interconnect scalability

  8. Blue Gene/L system components

  9. Blue Gene/L Compute ASIC • 2 Power PC440 cores with floating-point enhancements • 700MHz • Everything of a typical superscalar processor • Pipelined microarchitecture with dual instruction fetch, decode, and out of order issue, out of order dispatch, out of order execution and out of order completion, etc • 1 W each through extensive power management

  10. Blue Gene/L Compute ASIC

  11. Memory system on a BGL node • BG/L only supports distributed memory paradigm. • No need for efficient support for cache coherence on each node. • Coherence enforced by software if needed. • Two cores operate in two modes: • Communication coprocessor mode • Need coherence, managed in system level libraries • Virtual node mode • Memory is physical partitioned (not shared).

  12. Blue Gene/L networks • Five networks. • 100 Mbps Ethernet control network for diagnostics, debugging, and some other things. • 1000 Mbps Ethernet for I/O • Three high-band width, low-latency networks for data transmission and synchronization. • 3-D torus network for point-to-point communication • Collective network for global operations • Barrier network • All network logic is integrated in the BG/L node ASIC • Memory mapped interfaces from user space

  13. 3-D torus network • Support p2p communication • Link bandwidth 1.4Gb/s, 6 bidirectional link per node (1.2GB/s). • 64x32x32 torus: diameter 32+16+16=64 hops, worst case hardware latency 6.4us. • Cut-through routing • Adaptive routing

  14. Collective network • Binary tree topology, static routing • Link bandwidth: 2.8Gb/s • Maximum hardware latency: 5us • With arithmetic and logical hardware: can perform integer operation on the data • Efficient support for reduce, scan, global sum, and broadcast operations • Floating point operation can be done with 2 passes.

  15. Barrier network • Hardware support for global synchronization. • 1.5us for barrier on 64K nodes.

  16. IBM BlueGene/L summary • Optimize cost/performance • limiting applications. • Use low power design • Lower frequency, system-on-a-chip • Great performance per watt metric • Scalability support • Hardware support for global communication and barrier • Low latency, high bandwidth support

  17. Case 2: Infiniband architecture • Specification (Infiniband architecture specification release 1.2.1, January 2008/Oct. 2006) available at Infiniband Trade Association (http://www.infinibandta.org)

  18. Infiniband architecture overview

  19. Infiniband architecture overview • Components: • Links • Channel adaptors • Switches • Routers • The specification allows Infiniband wide area network, but mostly adopted as a system/storage area network. • Topology: • Irregular • Regular: Fat tree • Link speed: • Single data rate (SDR): 2.5Gbps (X), 10Gbps (4X), and 30Gbps (12X). • Double data rate (DDR): 5Gbps (X), 20 Gbps (4X) • Quad data rate (QDR): 40Gbps (4X)

  20. Layers: somewhat similar to TCP/IP • Physical layer • Link layer • Error detection (CRC checksum) • flow control (credit based) • switching, virtual lanes (VL), • forwarding table computed by subnet manager • Single path deterministic routing (not adaptive) • Network layer: across subnets. • No use for the cluster environment • Transport layer • Reliable/unreliable, connection/datagram • Verbs: interface between adaptors and OS/Users

  21. Infinoband Link layer Packet format: • Local Route Header (LRH): 8 bytes. Used for local routing by switches within a IBA subnet • Global Route Header (GRH): 40 Bytes. Used for routing between subnets • Base Transport header (BTH): 12 Bytes, for IBA transport • Extened transport header • Reliable datagram extended transport header (RDETH): 4 bytes, just for reliable datagram • Datagram extended transport header (DETH): 8 bytes • RDMA extended transport header (RETH): 16 bytes • Atomic, ACK, Atomic ACK, • Immediate DATA extended transport header: 4 bytes, optimized for small packets. • Invariant CRC and variant CRC: • CRC for fields not changed and changed.

  22. Local Route Header: • Switching based on the destination port address (LID) • Multipath switching by allocating multiple LIDs to one port

  23. Subnet management • Initialize the network • Discover subnet topology and topology changes, compute the paths, assign LIDs, distribute the routes, configure devices. • Related devices and entities • Devices: Channel Adapters (CA), Host Channel Adapters, switches, routers • Subnet manager(SM): discovering, configuring, activating and managing the subnet • A subnet management agent(SMA) in every device generates, responses to control packets (subnet management packets (SMPs)), and configures local components for subnet management • SM exchange control packets with SMA with subnet management interface (SMI).

  24. Subnet Management phases: • Topology discovery: sending direct routed SMP to every port and processing the responses. • Path computation: computing valid paths between each pair of end node • Path distribution phase: configuring the forwarding table

  25. Base transport header:

  26. Verbs • OS/Users access the adaptor through verbs • Communication mechanism: Queue Pair (QP) • Users can queue up a set of instructions that the hardware executes. • A pair of queues in each QP: one for send, one for receive. • Users can post send requests to the send queue and receive requests to the receive queue. • Three types of send operations: SEND, RDMA-(WRITE, READ, ATOMIC), MEMORY-BINDING • One receive operation (matching SEND)

  27. To communicate: • Make system calls to setup everything (open QP, bind QP to port, bind complete queues, connect local QP to remote QP, register memory, etc). • Post send/receive requests as user level instructions. • Check completion.

  28. InfiniBand has an almost perfect software/network interface: • The network subsystem realizes most user level functionality. • Network supports in-order delivery and and fault tolerance. • Buffer management is pushed out to the user. • OS bypass: User level accesses to the network interface. A few machine instructions will accomplish the transmission task without involving the OS.

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