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Evaluating tradeoffs between MPI message matching offload hardware capacity and performance

Levy, Scott; Ferreira, Kurt B.

Although its demise has been frequently predicted, the Message Passing Interface (MPI) remains the dominant programming model for scientific applications running on high-performance computing (HPC) systems. MPI specifies powerful semantics for interprocess communication that have enabled scientists to write applications for simulating important physical phenomena. However, these semantics have also presented several significant challenges. For example, the existence of wildcard values has made the efficient enforcement of MPI message matching semantics challenging. Significant research has been dedicated to accelerating MPI message matching. One common approach has been to offload matching to dedicated hardware. One of the challenges that hardware designers have faced is knowing how to size hardware structures to accommodate outstanding match requests. Applications that exceed the capacity of specialized hardware typically must fall back to storing match requests in bulk memory, e.g. DRAM on the host processor. In this paper, we examine the implications of hardware matching and develop guidance on sizing hardware matching structure to strike a balance between minimizing expensive dedicated hardware resources and overall matching performance. By examining the message matching behavior of several important HPC workloads, we show that when specialized hardware matching is not dramatically faster than matching in memory the offload hardware's match queue capacity can be reduced without significantly increasing match time. On the other hand, effectively exploiting the benefits of very fast specialized matching hardware requires sufficient storage resources to ensure that every search completes in the specialized hardware. The data and analysis in this paper provide important guidance for designers of MPI message matching hardware.