Title | ||
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Quantifying I/O and Communication Traffic Interference on Dragonfly Networks Equipped with Burst Buffers |
Abstract | ||
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HPC systems have shifted to burst buffer storage and high radix interconnect topologies in order to meet the challenges of large-scale, data-intensive scientific computing. Both of these technologies have been studied in detail independently, but the interaction between them is not well understood. I/O traffic and communication traffic from concurrently scheduled applications may interfere with each other in unexpected ways, and this behavior may vary considerably depending on resource allocation, scheduling, and routing policies. In this work, we analyze I/O and network traffic interference on burst-buffer-equipped dragonfly-based systems using the high-resolution packet-level simulations provided by the CODES storage and interconnect simulation framework. The analysis is performed using realistic I/O workload sizes, a variety of resource allocation and network routing strategies employed in production environments, and a dragonfly network configuration modeled after current vendor options. We analyze the impact of interference on both I/O and communication traffic. We observe that although average network packet latency is stable across a wide variety of configurations, the maximum network packet latency in the presence of concurrent I/O traffic is highly sensitive to subtle policy changes. Our simulations reveal a worst-case single packet latency of 4,700 times the average latency for sub-optimal configurations. While a topology-aware mapping of compute nodes to burst buffer storage nodes can minimize the variation in maximum packet latency, it can slow down the I/O traffic by creating contention on the burst buffer nodes. Overall, balancing I/O and network performance requires careful selection of routing, data placement, and job placement policies. |
Year | DOI | Venue |
---|---|---|
2017 | 10.1109/CLUSTER.2017.25 | 2017 IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing (CLUSTER) |
Keywords | Field | DocType |
burst buffer,dragonfly networks,discrete-event simulation,checkpoint,I/O and communication traffic | Scheduling (computing),Latency (engineering),Computer science,Computer network,Input/output,Real-time computing,Distributed computing,Multipath I/O,Network packet,Parallel computing,Network topology,Network traffic control,Network performance | Conference |
ISSN | ISBN | Citations |
1552-5244 | 978-1-5386-2327-5 | 6 |
PageRank | References | Authors |
0.44 | 25 | 10 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Mubarak Misbah | 1 | 134 | 14.22 |
Philip H. Carns | 2 | 964 | 62.51 |
Jonathan Jenkins | 3 | 20 | 1.69 |
Jianping Kelvin Li | 4 | 22 | 4.36 |
Nikhil Jain | 5 | 321 | 24.01 |
Shane Snyder | 6 | 64 | 8.38 |
Robert Ross | 7 | 2717 | 173.13 |
C. Carothers | 8 | 25 | 3.78 |
Abhinav Bhatele | 9 | 625 | 43.42 |
Kwan-Liu Ma | 10 | 5145 | 334.46 |