Affiliation:
1. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract
As we move to large manycores, the hardware-based
global
check-pointing schemes that have been proposed for small shared-memory machines do not scale. Scalability barriers include global operations, work lost to global rollback, and inefficiencies in imbalanced or I/O-intensive loads. Scalable checkpointing requires tracking inter-thread dependences and building the checkpoint and rollback operations around dynamic groups of communicating processors.
To address this problem, this paper introduces
Rebound
, the first hardware-based scheme for
coordinated local
checkpointing in multiprocessors with directory based cache coherence. Rebound leverages the transactions of a directory protocol to track inter-thread dependences. In addition, it boosts checkpointing efficiency by: (i) delaying the writeback of data to safe memory at checkpoints, (ii) supporting operation with multiple checkpoints, and (iii) optimizing checkpointing at barrier synchronization. Finally, Rebound introduces distributed algorithms for checkpointing and rollback sets of processors. Simulations of parallel programs with up to 64 threads show that Rebound is scalable and has very low overhead. For 64 processors, its average performance overhead is only 2%, compared to 15% for global checkpointing.
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Cited by
7 articles.
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