Tutorial:HiPEAC 2013

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IPC Visualization in Sniper 4.1

Tutorial Complete

We would like to thank the attendees of the tutorial and those we talked with at HiPEAC for your interest in using and developing with Sniper. If there are any additional questions or ideas that you might have or would like to work on together to implement, please feel free to browse or post on our mailing list. The tutorial slides are now available online and can be downloaded below.

Slides

HiPEAC Tutorial Slides

Location and Date

We will give a tutorial on Sniper at HiPEAC 2013 in Berlin, Germany. The tutorial will take place on Tuesday, January 22 between 10am and 1pm in the Spree conference room.

Organizers and Presenters

Organizer: Lieven Eeckhout, Ghent University
Presenter: Wim Heirman, Intel ExaScience Lab and Ghent University
Presenter: Trevor E. Carlson, Intel ExaScience Lab and Ghent University
Presenter: Kenzo Van Craeynest, Ghent University
Presenter: Ibrahim Hur, Intel

Abstract

Two major trends in high-performance computing, namely, larger numbers of cores and the growing size of on-chip cache memory, are creating significant challenges for evaluating the design space of future processor architectures. Fast, scalable and accurate simulations are needed to allow for sufficient exploration of large multi-core systems within a limited simulation time budget. Through the use of high-abstraction analytical models with fast parallel simulation in the Sniper simulator, computer architects can trade off accuracy with simulation speed to allow for longer application runs, covering a larger portion of the hardware design space.

The purpose of this tutorial is to introduce both the main features of the Sniper simulator, as well as provide detail into the use of the simulator itself. Specifically, this tutorial will provide an in-depth look into the theory and implementation of the interval core model and CPI-stack generation. We will give a detailed rundown of how to specify heterogeneous architectures and implement scheduling algorithms. We also highlight other features such as full DVFS support, scripting and program-to-simulator communication and provide an overview of the various component models and simulator configurability and flexibility.

Sniper's key features are:

  • The interval core model to raise the level of abstraction in multi-core simulation
  • Parallel simulation on multi-core host hardware, achieving simulation speeds of up to 2 MIPS
  • Runs multi-threaded shared-memory and multi-programmed x86 workloads
  • Support for heterogeneous configurations, thread scheduling and migration
  • Validated against real hardware

Additional information about Sniper can be found here.

Schedule

  • 10:00-10:30 Introduction & Sniper rationale
  • 10:30-11:00 Interval core model
  • 11:00-11:30 — Coffee break —
  • 11:30-11:45 Validation results
  • 11:45-12:30 Running simulations & processing results
  • 12:30-13:00 Visualization & demo

Biographies

Lieven Eeckhout is an Associate Professor at Ghent University, Belgium, in the Department of Electronics and Information Systems (ELIS). He obtained his MS and PhD degrees from Ghent University in 1998 and 2002, respectively. His research interests include computer architecture and the hardware/software interface in general, and performance analysis, evaluation and modeling more in particular. He received two IEEE Micro Top Picks Awards and recently wrote a synthesis lecture on "Computer Architecture Performance Evaluation Methods" published by Morgan and Claypool. He graduated 7 PhD students, and currently supervises 4 postdoctoral researchers and 8 PhD students.

Wim Heirman received his PhD in 2008 from Ghent University, Belgium, on reconfigurable optical interconnection networks for multicore processors. Since 2010, Dr. Heirman has worked at the Intel Exascience Laboratory. His research interests are fast and accurate computer simulation, enabling architectural exploration and software analysis through co-design, and energy-efficient high-performance computing.

Trevor E. Carlson is a PhD student at Ghent University and is a part of the Intel ExaScience Lab. He received his BS and MS degrees from Carnegie Mellon University in 2002 and 2003, respectively. He has previously served as a Staff Engineer at IBM where he helped to author 4 issued patents and also served as a Researcher at IMEC where he investigated efficient architectures for embedded and 3D-stacked systems. His research interests include performance modeling and fast and scalable simulation methodologies.

Ibrahim Hur received his PhD in 2006 from the University of Texas at Austin. Since 2011, he works at the Intel Exascience Lab. Previously he worked at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center for one year and at IBM Austin for 12 years. His research interests include computer architecture and performance analysis. He holds five issued US patents, and he received one IEEE Micro Top Picks Award and four conference Best Paper Awards including one in MICRO.

Kenzo Van Craeynest is a PhD student at Ghent University where he also received his masters in computer science in 2008. His research interests include cache performance, performance modeling, heterogeneous multi-cores and thread scheduling.