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A framework for examining behavior of concurrent GPU usage, using the HIP programming language. Based on my cuda_scheduling_examiner project.

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HIP Plugin Framework

About

This project is based on the CUDA Scheduling Examiner framework, which made it convenient to configure and examine the behavior of multiple GPU-sharing tasks on NVIDIA. The HIP plugin framework is architecturally similar, but has been overhauled to use more intuitive terminology and to remove any NVIDIA-specific code. (Which, unfortunately means that this project is unable to plot which compute units blocks are assigned to.)

To cite this work, either link the repository or cite the following paper:

@inproceedings{otterness2021amd,
  title={Exploring {AMD} {GPU} Scheduling Details by Experimenting With ``Worst Practices''},
  author={Otterness, Nathan and Anderson, James H.},
  booktitle={International Conference on Real-Time Networks and Systems (RTNS)},
  year={2021}
}

Prerequisites

Some of this project may require modified versions of AMD's HIP framework or other ROCm components (as it is intended to support my research). If any such modifications are needed, they should be included in this repository. As of ROCm 3.7, however, this repository should not require any non-standard HIP functionality for most basic usage.

Components related to setting GPU deadlines will not work unless the Linux kernel module and patches located in this repository, are present and loaded. However, this is not required if you aren't using locking; the framework will run without it as long as configs don't include the job_deadline setting.

Basic Compilation and Usage

Compiling this project requires HIP, and hipcc must be on your PATH. Only Linux is supported for now, and only AMD GPUs. (Compilation should also work on NVIDIA, but is not a priority and may require modifying the makefile.)

To build:

git clone https://github.com/yalue/hip_plugin_framework
cd hip_plugin_framework
make

To test it, run:

./bin/runner configs/simple.json

Configuration Files

The configuration files specify parameters passed to each plugin along with some global settings for the entire framework. See configs/simple.json for a minimal working example, using the Mandelbrot-set plugin.

The layout of each configuration file is as follows:

{
  "name": <String. Required. The name of this scenario.>,
  "max_iterations": <Number. Required. Default cap on the number of iterations
    for each plugin. 0 = unlimited.>,
  "max_time": <Number. Required. Default cap on the number of number of seconds
    to run each plugin. 0 = unlimited.>,
  "use_processes": <Boolean, defaulting to false. If this is true, each
    plugin is run in a separate process. Normally, they run as threads.>
  "gpu_device_id": <Number. Required. The HIP device to use.>,
  "base_result_directory": <String, defaulting to "./results". This is the
    directory into which individual JSON files from each plugin will be
    written. It must already exist.>,
  "pin_cpus": <Boolean. Optional, defaults to false. If true, attempt to pin
    plugins to CPU cores, evenly distributed across cores. If true, individual
    plugin's cpu_core settings are ignored.>,
  "do_warmup": <Boolean. Optional, defaults to false. If true, the framework
    will run a warmup iteration of each plugin immediately after
    initialization. The times from the warmup iteration will not be included in
    result logs, so this option can be used to make sure code and data is
    brought into the relevant caches, if possible, prior to the first
    iteration.>,
  "sync_every_iteration": <Boolean. Optional, defaults to false. If true,
    iterations of each plugins start only when all plugins have completed their
    previous iteration. By default, each plugin only waits for its own previous
    iteration to complete.>,
  "omit_block_times": <Boolean. Optional, defaults to false. If true, block
    times will not be listed in results JSON files. Instead, the block_times
    field will always be set to an empty array. This can save time and space
    when running experiments where you don't care about block times. They'll
    still be recorded by plugins--just not written to the output file.>,
  "plugins": [
    {
      "filename": <String. Required. The path to the plugin shared library,
        relative to the current working directory.>,
      "log_name": <String. Optional. The filename of the JSON log for this
        particular plugin. If not provided, this plugin's log will be given a
        default name based on its filename, process and thread ID. If this
        doesn't start with '/', it will be relative to base_result_directory.
        This can be /dev/null to throw away logs.>,
      "label:": <String. Optional. A label or name for this specific plugin, to
        be copied to its output file.>,
      "thread_count": <Number or array. Required, but may be ignored. The
        number of HIP threads that each block of this plugin should use. May
        also be an array with up to 3 integers, specifying a multi-dimensional
        block size.>,
      "block_count": <Number or array. Required, but may be ignored. The number
        of HIP blocks this plugin's kernels should use. May also be an array
        with up to 3 integers, specifying a multi-dimensional grid size.>,
      "additional_info": <A JSON object of any format. Optional. This can be
        used to pass additional plugin-specific configuration parameters.>,
      "max_iterations": <Number. Optional. If specified, overrides the default
        max_iterations for this plugin alone. 0 = unlimited. If this is
        provided for any plugin, then sync_every_iteration must be false.>,
      "max_time": <Number. Optional. If specified, overrides the default
        max_time for this plugin alone. 0 = unlimited.>,
      "release_time": <Number. Optional. If set, this plugin will sleep for the
        given number of seconds (between initialization and the start of the
        first iteration) before beginning execution.>,
      "initialization_delay": <Number. Optional. If set, the framework will
        sleep for the given number of seconds before calling the plugin's
        initialization function. Intended to be used as a crude mechanism for
        enforcing initialization order.>,
      "job_deadline": <Number. Optional. If set, must be a floating-point
        number of seconds specifying a relative deadline within which each
        of the plugin's iterations must complete. (In other words, the relative
        deadline is updated at the start of every iteration.)  It is an error
        to set this if the GPU locking modules isn't available (see the
        Prerequisites section of this README). If not present, no deadlines
        will be set. Must be positive if set.>,
      "cpu_core": <Number. Optional. If specified, and pin_cpus is false, the
        system will attempt to pin this plugin onto the given CPU core.>
      "compute_unit_mask": <Optional. Can be an array of booleans, or a string
        of binary digits, or a hexadecimal string starting with "0x". This will
        be used by the framework to attempt to configure the CUs on which the
        plugin's kernels are allowed to run. If the value is a string, it is
        interpreted as a list of bits, where if bit i is 1, then execution is
        allowed on CU i. If the value is an array of booleans execution is
        allowed on CU i if entry i is true. If this is not provided or too
        short, then unspecified values default to being enabled.>
    },
    {
      <more plugin instances can be listed here>
    }
  ]
}

Additionally, configurations support the insertion of comments via the usage of "comment" keys, which will be ignored at runtime.

Output File Format

Each plugin, when run, will generate a JSON log file at the location specified in the configuration. If the plugin did not complete successfully, the JSON file may be in an invalid state. Times will be recorded as floating-point numbers of seconds. The format of the log file is:

{
  "scenario_name": "<Scenario name>",
  "plugin_name": "<Plugin name>",
  "label": "<This plugin's label, if given in the config>",
  "max_resident_threads": <The maximum number of threads that can be assigned
    to the GPU at a time (from all plugins in the scenario)>,
  "data_size": <Data size>,
  "release_time": <Requested release time in seconds>,
  "PID": <pid>,
  "TID": <The thread ID, if plugins were run as threads>,
  "times": [
    {},
    {
      "cpu_times": [
        <The CPU time before the copy_in function was called>,
        <The CPU time after the copy_out function returned>
      ],
      "copy_in_times": [
        <The CPU time before the copy_in function was called>,
        <The CPU time after the copy_in function returned>
      ],
      "execute_times": [
        <The CPU time when the execute function was called>,
        <The CPU time after the execute function returned>
      ],
      "copy_out_times": [
        <The CPU time when the copy_out function was called>,
        <The CPU time after the copy_out function returned>
      ],
      "cpu_core": <The current CPU core being used>
    },
    {
      "kernel_name": <The name of this particular kernel. May be omitted.>,
      "block_count": <The number of blocks in this kernel invocation.>,
      "thread_count": <The number of threads per block in this invocation.>,
      "shared_memory": <The amount of shared memory used by this kernel.>,
      "kernel_launch_times": [<CPU time immediately before the kernel launch.>,
        <CPU time immediately after kernel launch returned.>,
        <CPU time immediately after hipStreamSynchronize returned. This will
        be set to 0 if hipStreamSynchronize isn't called for this kernel.>],
      "block_times": [<Start time>, <End time>, ..., <This may be empty if the
        plugin doesn't record block times. This contains block start and end
        times in *millions of GPU cycles*, not seconds.>]
    },
    ...
  ]
}

Notice that the first entry in the "times" array will be blank and should be ignored. The times array will contain two types of objects: one will contain CPU times and one type will apply to kernel times. An object containing CPU times will contain a "cpu_times" key. A single CPU times object will encompass all kernel times following it, up until another CPU times object.

Creating New Plugins

Each plugin must be contained in a shared library and abide by the interface specified in src/plugin_interface.h. In particular, the library must export a RegisterPlugin function, which provides the addresses of further functions to the framework. Plugins should preferably never use global state and instead use the user_data pointer returned by the initialize function to track all state. The reason for this is that we want to be able to run multiple instances of a single plugin at a time--global variables prevent instances of a single plugin from being independent. Similarly to global variables, plugins should use a user-created HIP stream in order to avoid unnecessarily blocking each other by hipDeviceSynchronize (or similar) calls.

The most important piece of information that each plugin provides is the TimingInformation struct, which it must fill in during its copy_out function. This struct will contain a list of KernelTimes structs, one for each kernel invocation called during execute. Each KernelTimes struct will contain the kernel start and end times and, if possible, individual block start and end times (we recognize this may be quite obnoxious to add to some plugins, so block_times are treated as quite desirable, but still optional). The plugin is responsible for ensuring that the buffers provided in the TimingInformation struct remain valid at least until another plugin function is called. They will not be freed by the caller.

In general, the comments in plugin_interface.h provide an explanation for the actions that every plugin-provided function is expected to carry out. The src/mandelbrot.cpp file contains a well-commented example of a working plugin implementation.

In addition to plugin_interface.h, plugin_utilities.h and plugin_hip_utilities.h define a library of utility functions that may be used by plugins.

Plugins are invoked by the framework as follows:

  1. The shared library file is loaded using the dlopen() function, and the RegisterPlugin function is located using dlysym().

  2. Depending on the configuration, either a new process or new thread will be created for each plugin.

  3. In its own thread or process, the plugin's initialize function will be called, in which the plugin should allocate and initialize all of the local state necessary for one instance of itself.

  4. When the plugin begins running, a single "iteration" will consist of the plugin's copy_in, execute, and copy_out functions being called, in that order.

  5. When enough time has elapsed or the maximum number of iterations has been reached, the plugin's cleanup function will be called, to allow for the plugin to clean up and free its local state.

  6. If any of the plugin's functions, apart from initialize return an error, the framework will still call the plugin's cleanup function, and then cease calling further functions from the plugin.

Coding Style

Even though HIP supports C++, contributions to this project should use the C programming language when possible. C or HIP source code should adhere to the parts of the Google C++ Style Guide that apply to the C language.

Scripts should remain in the scripts/ directory and should be written in python when possible. For now, there is no explicit style guide for python scripts apart from trying to maintain a consistent style within each file.

Rodinia Plugins

This project contains several plugins that have been ported from the Rodinia benchmark suite. The code for these plugins are located in the src/third_party/rodinia_plugins directory. The four plugins, backprop, dwt2d, gaussian, and particlefilter have been modified to clean up code, remove global variables, and to adhere to the plugin interface required by the project.

Compile these plugins by running make rodinia_plugins in the main project directory. Some sample configs exist for testing these plugins in configs/. For example, running ./bin/runner configs/particlefilter.json launches a single instance of the particlefilter plugin.

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A framework for examining behavior of concurrent GPU usage, using the HIP programming language. Based on my cuda_scheduling_examiner project.

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