Author:
Bandieramonte Marilena,Chapman John Derek,Chiu Justin,Gray Heather,Muskinja Miha
Abstract
Estimations of the CPU resources that will be needed to produce simulated data for the future runs of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC, indicate a compelling need to speed-up the process to reduce the computational time required. While different fast simulation projects are ongoing, full Geant4 based simulation will still be heavily used and is expected to consume the biggest portion of the total estimated processing time. In order to run effectively on modern architectures and profit from multi-core designs a migration of the Athena framework to a multi-threading processing model was performed. A multi-threaded simulation based on AthenaMT and Geant4MT, enables substantial decreases in the memory footprint of jobs, largely from shared geometry and cross-section tables. This approach scales better with respect to the multi-processing approach (AthenaMP) especially on the architectures that are foreseen to be used in the next LHC runs. In these proceedings we report about the status of the multi-threaded simulation in ATLAS, focusing on the different challenges of its validation process. We demonstrate the different tools and strategies that have been used for debugging multi-threaded runs versus the corresponding sequential ones, in order to have a fully reproducible and consistent simulation result.
Reference18 articles.
1. The ATLAS Collaboration, Computing and software public results, https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/AtlasPublic/ComputingandSoftwarePublicResults
2. HEP-SPEC06 Benchmark, https://w3.hepix.org/benchmarking/how_to_run_hs06.html
3. Geant4—a simulation toolkit
4. Geant4 developments and applications
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献