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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing Benchmarking a Beowulf Cluster Post 302311959 by otheus on Thursday 30th of April 2009 04:53:12 AM
Old 04-30-2009
First, you should (a) install the ATLAS and scalapak libraries, and make sure these are on each node. Second, you need to install one of the MPI packages (OpenMPI, LAMMPI, MPICH, etc); the run-times need to be on each node, and the compiler libraries and tools need to be on one node. Third, you need to recompile for MPI and ATLAS. I believe linpack uses a configure script in which you tell it to use MPI or something like that. Fourth, for these benchmarks, you should disable Linux's swap; this ensures the linpack doesn't start swapping and killing performance. (Do this with sysctl vm.swappiness=0" and after "=1") (If it runs out of memory, the problem size is too large, and the process fails.)

Next, start out with a simple test to make sure your hpl + mpi setup is working. You'll need a dummy config file like this:
Code:
Our cluster benchmark
My university lab
HPL.out
6
1
400
1
50
1
1     
4
3
-1
1       # of panel fact
0
1       # of recursive stopping criterium
2
1       # of panels in recursion
2
1       # of recursive panel fact.
0
1       # of Bcasts
1
1       # of Lookahead depths
0
2
60
0
0
0       
8       # alignment of double

It should run to completion and give you some reasonable output (the last number of the output is GFlops). With these Xeon's, your theoretical peak is 3 (nodes) * 4 (CPUs) * 4 (cores) * 3.4 (GHz) * N (Floating point operations / cycle) = 163 * N. (See the Intel spec sheet for your processor to determine N).

Once you have that working, you're ready for tuning the HPL suite: run a series of tests, each with a different configuration. One configuration file does this. The linpack program permutes all possible combinations of parameters within the file, and runs one test on each permutation. A quide to this format can be found here, but here's what I suggest you start with:
Code:
Our cluster benchmark
My university lab
HPL.out
6
7
100 200 400 800 1600 3200 6400 
5
50 100 150 200 250
1
4
12 4 3 1
1 3 4 12
-1
3       # of panel fact
0 1 2   PFACTs (0=left, 1=Crout, 2=Right)
4       # of recursive stopping criterium
1 2 4 8 NBMINs (>= 1)
3       # of panels in recursion
2 3 4   NDIVs
3       # of recursive panel fact.
0 1 2   RFACTs (0=left, 1=Crout, 2=Right)
5       # of Bcasts
0 1 2 3 4 5
3       # Lookaheads
0 1 2
2       # SWAP type
60      # SWAP=2 threshold
0
0
1
8

Now, this will will take a long time. Make sure you pipe the output with " | tee hpout.dat" to make sure you capture the output and can see it and it gets saved to disk.

After this, look for the top 8 or 16 results, and refine the config file to use only the parameters that produced these results.

NOW you can start performance tuning the cluster. Most critically, you will want to (a) tune the TCP/IP kernel parameters, (b) disable all non-essential Linux processes on all nodes, and (c) tune the switch parameters for the cluster ports -- ie, disable auto-negotiate and maybe tune the messaging queues (some switches use different types of service and have small queues for each one; you want one large queue for all TOS).
 

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scconf_transp_adap_e1000g(1M)				  System Administration Commands			     scconf_transp_adap_e1000g(1M)

NAME
scconf_transp_adap_e1000g - configure the Intel PRO/1000 network adapter DESCRIPTION
Note - Beginning with the Sun Cluster 3.2 release, Sun Cluster software includes an object-oriented command set. Although Sun Cluster software still supports the original command set, Sun Cluster procedural documentation uses only the object-oriented command set. For more infor- mation about the object-oriented command set, see the Intro(1CL) man page. You can configure e1000g Intel PRO/1000 network adapters as cluster transport adapters. These adapters can only be used with transport type dlpi. The e1000g based network adapter connects to a transport switch or to another Ethernet adapter on a different node. In either case, the connection is made through a transport cable. When a transport switch is used and the endpoints of the transport cable are configured by using scconf, scinstall, or other tools, you are asked to specify a port name on the transport switch. You can provide any port name, or accept the default, as long as the name is unique for the switch. The default is to set the port name to the node identifier that hosts the adapter at the other end of the cable. There are no user configurable properties for cluster transport adapters of this type. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Architecture |x86 | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
Intro(1CL), clinterconnect(1CL), clnode(1CL), scconf(1M), scinstall(1M), e1000g(7D) Sun Cluster 3.2 4 May 2006 scconf_transp_adap_e1000g(1M)
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