POETS: An Event-driven Approach to Dissipative Particle Dynamics

Author:

Brown Andrew D.1ORCID,Beaumont Jonathan R.2ORCID,Thomas David B.1ORCID,Shillcock Julian C.3ORCID,Naylor Matthew F.4ORCID,Bragg Graeme M.1ORCID,Vousden Mark L.1ORCID,Moore Simon W.4ORCID,Fleming Shane T.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, UK

2. Department of Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London, UK

3. Blue Brain Project, Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

4. Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, UK

5. Department of Computer Science, University of Swansea, UK

Abstract

HPC clusters have become ever more expensive, both in terms of capital cost and energy consumption; some estimates suggest that competitive installations at the end of the next decade will require their own power station. One way around this looming problem is to design bespoke computing engines, but while the performance benefits are good, the design costs are huge and cannot easily be amortized. Partially Ordered Event Triggered System (POETS)—the focus of this article—seeks to exploit a middle way: The architecture is tuned to a specific algorithmic pattern but, within that constraint, is fully programmable. POETS software is quasi-imperative: The user defines a set of sequential event handlers, defines the topology of a (typically large) concurrent ensemble of these, and lets them interact. The “solution” may be exfiltrated from the emergent behaviour of the ensemble. In this article, we describe (briefly) the architecture, and an example computational chemistry application, dissipative particle dynamics (DPD). The DPD algorithm is traditionally implemented using parallel computational techniques, but we re-cast it as a concurrent compute problem that is then ideally suited to POETS. Our prototype system is realised on a cluster of 48 FPGAs providing 50K concurrent hardware threads, and we report performance speedups of over two orders of magnitude better than a single thread baseline comparator and scaling behaviour that is almost constant. The results are validated against a “conventional” implementation.

Funder

EPSRC

Swiss Governments ETH Board of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Hardware and Architecture,Modeling and Simulation,Software

Reference52 articles.

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4. Richard Membarth, Frank Hannig, Jürgen Teich, and Harald Köstler. 2012. Towards domain-specific computing for stencil codes in HPC. In SC Companion: High Performance Computing, Networking Storage and Analysis. IEEE, 1133–1138.

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