Quantifying Overheads in Charm++ and HPX Using Task Bench

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Date

1-1-2023

Abstract

Asynchronous Many-Task (AMT) runtime systems take advantage of multi-core architectures with light-weight threads, asynchronous executions, and smart scheduling. In this paper, we present the comparison of the AMT systems Charm++ and HPX with the main stream MPI, OpenMP, and MPI+OpenMP libraries using the Task Bench benchmarks. Charm++ is a parallel programming language based on C++, supporting stackless tasks as well as light-weight threads asynchronously along with an adaptive runtime system. HPX is a C++ library for concurrency and parallelism, exposing C++ standards conforming API. First, we analyze the commonalities, differences, and advantageous scenarios of Charm++ and HPX in detail. Further, to investigate the potential overheads introduced by the tasking systems of Charm++ and HPX, we utilize an existing parameterized benchmark, Task Bench, wherein 15 different programming systems were implemented, e.g., MPI, OpenMP, MPI + OpenMP, and extend Task Bench by adding HPX implementations. We quantify the overheads of Charm++, HPX, and the main stream libraries in different scenarios where a single task and multi-task are assigned to each core, respectively. We also investigate each system’s scalability and the ability to hide the communication latency.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)

First Page

5

Last Page

16

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