Temperature Aware Load Balancing for Parallel Applications: Preliminary Work
Workshop on High-Peformance Power Aware Computing at IPDPS (HPPAC) 2011
Publication Type: Paper
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Abstract
Increasing number of cores and clock speeds on a smaller chip area
implies more heat dissipation and an ever increasing heat density.
This increased heat, in turn, leads to higher cooling cost and
occurrence of hot spots. Effective use of dynamic voltage and
frequency scaling (DVFS) can help us alleviate this problem. But
there is an associated execution time penalty which can get
amplified in parallel applications. In high performance computing,
applications are typically tightly coupled and even a single
overloaded core can adversely affect the execution time of the
entire application. This makes load balancing of utmost value. In
this paper, we outline a temperature aware load balancing scheme,
which uses DVFS to keep core temperatures below a user-defined
threshold with minimum timing penalty. While doing so, it also
reduces the possibility of hot spots. We apply our scheme to three
parallel applications with different energy consumption profiles.
Results from our technique show that we save up to 14% in execution
time and 12% in machine energy consumption as compared to frequency
scaling without using load balancing. We are also able to bound the
average temperature of all the cores and reduce the temperature
deviation amongst the cores by a factor of 3.
TextRef
Osman Sarood and Abishek Gupta and Laxmikant V. Kale, "Temperature Aware Load Balancing for Parallel Applications: Preliminary Work",
Parallel Programming Laboratory, Department of Computer Science, University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Proceedings of High Performance Power Aware Computing (HPPAC) in IEEE International Parallel and
Distributed Processing Symposium 2011, May 2011.
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