Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment

This dissertation provides a comprehensive overview of the theory and practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling (DVFS) in the High Performance Computing (HPC) environment. We summarize the overall problem as follows: how can the same level of computational performance be achieved using less elec...

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Main Author: Rountree, Barry
Other Authors: Lowenthal, David K.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2013
Subjects:
DVS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/305368
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3053682014-02-05T15:22:27Z Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment Rountree, Barry Lowenthal, David K. Lowenthal, David K. de Supinski, Bronis R. Funk, Shelby Hartman, John high Performance Computing Computer Science DVFS DVS Maison des pays iberiques This dissertation provides a comprehensive overview of the theory and practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling (DVFS) in the High Performance Computing (HPC) environment. We summarize the overall problem as follows: how can the same level of computational performance be achieved using less electrical power? Equivalently, how can computational performance be increased using the same amount of electrical power? In this dissertation we present performance and architecture models of DVFS as well as the Adagio runtime system. The performance model recasts the question as an optimization problem that we solve using linear programming, thus establishing a bound on potential energy savings. The architectural model provides a low-level explanation of how memory bus and CPU clock frequencies interact to determine execution time. Using insights provided from these models, we have designed and implemented the Adagio runtime system. This system realizes near-optimal energy savings on real-world scientific applications without the use of training runs or source code modification, and under the constraint that only negligible delay will be tolerated by the user. This work has opened up several new avenues of research, and we conclude by enumerating these. 2013-11-13T17:03:23Z 2013-11-13T17:03:23Z 2009 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/305368 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic high Performance Computing
Computer Science
DVFS
DVS
Maison des pays iberiques
spellingShingle high Performance Computing
Computer Science
DVFS
DVS
Maison des pays iberiques
Rountree, Barry
Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
description This dissertation provides a comprehensive overview of the theory and practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling (DVFS) in the High Performance Computing (HPC) environment. We summarize the overall problem as follows: how can the same level of computational performance be achieved using less electrical power? Equivalently, how can computational performance be increased using the same amount of electrical power? In this dissertation we present performance and architecture models of DVFS as well as the Adagio runtime system. The performance model recasts the question as an optimization problem that we solve using linear programming, thus establishing a bound on potential energy savings. The architectural model provides a low-level explanation of how memory bus and CPU clock frequencies interact to determine execution time. Using insights provided from these models, we have designed and implemented the Adagio runtime system. This system realizes near-optimal energy savings on real-world scientific applications without the use of training runs or source code modification, and under the constraint that only negligible delay will be tolerated by the user. This work has opened up several new avenues of research, and we conclude by enumerating these.
author2 Lowenthal, David K.
author_facet Lowenthal, David K.
Rountree, Barry
author Rountree, Barry
author_sort Rountree, Barry
title Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
title_short Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
title_full Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
title_fullStr Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
title_full_unstemmed Theory and Practice of Dynamic Voltage/Frequency Scaling in the High Performance Computing Environment
title_sort theory and practice of dynamic voltage/frequency scaling in the high performance computing environment
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/305368
work_keys_str_mv AT rountreebarry theoryandpracticeofdynamicvoltagefrequencyscalinginthehighperformancecomputingenvironment
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