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NVTX Ranges |
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Developer Overview |
NVTX ranges are typically used to profile applications that use the GPU. Such NVTX profiles, once captured can be visually analyzed using NVIDIA NSight Systems. This document is specific to the RAPIDS Spark Plugin profiling.
We need to pass a flag to the spark executors / driver in order to enable NVTX collection. This can be done for spark shell by adding the following configuration keys:
--conf spark.driver.extraJavaOptions=-Dai.rapids.cudf.nvtx.enabled=true
--conf spark.executor.extraJavaOptions=-Dai.rapids.cudf.nvtx.enabled=true
For java based profile tests add this to JAVA_OPTS
export JAVA_OPTS=”-Dai.rapids.cudf.nvtx.enabled=true”
To capture the process’ profile run: nsys profile <command>
where command can be your Spark shell
/ Java program etc. This works typically in non-distributed mode.
To make it run in Spark’s distributed mode, start the worker with nsys profile
in front of the
worker start command.
Here is an example that starts up a worker in standalone mode, profiles it and the shell until the shell exits (using Ctrl+D) while stopping the worker process at the end.
nsys profile bash -c " \
CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES=0 ${SPARK_HOME}/sbin/start-worker.sh $master_url & \
$SPARK_HOME/bin/spark-shell; \
${SPARK_HOME}/sbin/stop-worker.sh"
If you need to kill the worker process that is being traced, do not use kill -9
.
You should have a *.qdrep file once the trace completes. This can now be opened in NSight UI.
If you are in Java or Scala land you can do the following:
val nvtxRange = new NvtxRange(<name of the range>, NvtxColor.YELLOW)
try {
// the code you want to profile
} finally {
nvtxRange.close()
}
In C++ land:
gdf_nvtx_range_push_hex("write_orc_all", 0xffff0000);
// the code you want to profile
gdf_nvtx_range_pop();
To use CPU profiling features, run the following command before running nsys profile
:
sudo sh -c 'echo [level] >/proc/sys/kernel/perf_event_paranoid'
where valid values are { 1, 2 }. Refer to NVIDIA Nsight Systems documentation for further details.