development tools for hpc applications deniz savas, michael griffiths corporate information and...

42
Development Tools For HPC Applications Deniz Savas, Michael Griffiths Corporate Information and Computing Services The University of Sheffield Email [email protected], [email protected]

Upload: jocelin-phelps

Post on 26-Dec-2015

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Development ToolsFor HPC Applications

Deniz Savas, Michael GriffithsCorporate Information and Computing ServicesThe University of SheffieldEmail [email protected], [email protected]

• Building Applications– Gnu compilers, g++, g++, g77– Portland compilers, pg++, pgf77

• Calling fortran from C and C from fortran

• Using, Building and installing libraries• Using the make utility• The Eclipse Development Environment• Links

Outline

Compilers

Language GNU Portland

C gcc pgcc

C++ g++ pgCC

Fortran 77 g77 pgf77

Fortran90/95 pgf90

Invoking the Compiler

• Compiling FORTRAN Programs– pgf77 –o mycode [options] mycode.f

• Compiling c/c++ Programs– pgcc –o mycode [options] mycode.c

Options Used with Both gnu and Portland Compilers

Option Action-c Compile, do not link.

-o exefile Specifies a name for the resulting executable.

-g Produce debugging information (no optimization).

-Ilibrary_name (lower case L)

Link the given library into the program.

e.g. include math library by using option -lm

-ldirectory-name (upper case I)

Add directory to search path for include files

-O N Set optimisation level to N

-Dmacro[=defn] Define a macro

Options Used with Portland Compilers

Option Action-tp k8-64 Specify target processor type to be opteron processor

running 64 bit system (Portland only).

-Mvect=sse2 Vectorizer option, turn on streaming SIMD extensions (SSE) and SSE2 instructions. SSE2 instructions operate on 64bit floating point data

-Mvect=prefetch Generate prefetch instructions

-Mconcur Auto parallelization option

-fastsse Optimal set of options for processors supporting SSE/SSE2, Streaming SIMD Extensions

-fast Full optimisation with function unrolling and code reordering (Portland only).

-g77 libs Link time option allowing object files generated by g77 to be linked into programs (may cause problems with parallel libraries)

-Mbounds Check arrays for out of bounds access

Options Used with gnu CompilersOption Action TO CHECK--version Return version information

-mtune=cpu-type

-march=cpu-type

I386-I64 processor specification options.

-mmmx -msse

-msse2

Options to enable sse/sse2 or mmx(windows)

-Wall Show all warnings

-Wno-deprecated Switch off warnings about use of deprecated function (c++ only)

Linking a FORTRAN application with NAG libraries• NAG best and most comprehensive library of

numerical computing routines available• Mark20 on iceberg use –lnag and –lacml with the

pgf77 or pgf90 compiler• Example

– pgf90 myprogf90 –lnag –lacml

• See comprehensive documentation at– https://iceberg.shef.ac.uk/docs/nag/index.html

The AMD core math libraries (acml)

• ACML consists of the following main components:– A full implementation of Level 1, 2 and 3 Basic Linear

Algebra Subroutines (BLAS), with key routines optimized for high performance on AMD Opteron™ processors.

– A full suite of Linear Algebra (LAPACK) routines. As well as taking advantage of the highly-tuned BLAS kernels, a key set of LAPACK routines has been further optimized to achieve considerably higher performance than standard LAPACK implementations.

– A comprehensive suite of Fast Fourier Transforms (FFTs) in both single-, double-, single-complex and double-complex data types.

Using the acml libraries

• Building an application using the portland compilers– pgcc myapp.c -I/opt/acml-pg2.6.0/pgi64/include -L/opt/acml-

pg2.6.0/pgi64/lib -lm –lacml

• Building an application using the gnu compilers– gcc myapp.c -I/opt/acml-gnu2.6.0/gnu64/include

-L/opt/acml-gnu2.6.0/gnu64/lib -lm –lacml

• Examples– Documentation at

https://iceberg.shef.ac.uk/docs/acmldoc/html/index.html– See

http://www.shef.ac.uk/wrgrid/documents/hpc/numlibs.html#acmlexamples

Building Large Applications

• Typically compile program using– g++ –o myprog myprog.c –lm –g

• Large programs– Modularized– Combine into a single executable

• Building large applications is a multi step process– Compile each source file– Link resulting objects into an executable

Example Multi Source Program:1

• To build the Monte-carlo model, mc, we do the following.– g++ –c –g mc.cpp– g++ –c –g mc_system.cpp– g++ –c –g mc_particle.cpp– g++ –c -g mc_statistics.cpp– g++ –o mc mc.o mc_system.o mc_particle.o mc_statistics.o

–lm• Note: only one of the sources has a main function

Example Multi Source Program:2

• If mc_system.cpp is edited we don’t need to recompile– mc_statistics, mc_particle or mc

• Rebuild the application as follows– g++ –c –g mc_system.cpp

– g++ –o mc mc.o mc_system.o mc_particle.o mc_statistics.o –lm

• Automate these steps using make

Libraries

• Libraries are packaged collections of object files– Standard library contains printf… etc..– Maths library contains sin, cos etc..

• Specify additional libraries with –l<name>– Only standard library is provided automatically

• To compile a program with a maths library– g++ –c myprog myprog.c -lm

Building your own library

• Benefits of building libraries– Share standardised functions with community

– Separate functionality from detailed code

– Good way of packing up your most useful routines and reusing them

• How to build– Build libraries using

– Named as lib<name>.a or lib<name>.so

– http://www-cs.canisius.edu/PL_TUTORIALS/C/C-UNIX/libraries

Example

• Example my util library– g++ -c vec.cc

• Generates vec.o– g++ -c mat.cc

• Generates mat.o• Add object files to library

– ar r myutillib.a vec.o– ar r mylibutil.a mat.o

• Don’t use –l for your own libraries link as follows– g++ myprog.cc mylib.a –o myprog

Installing a Library

• General steps– Download and uncompress source– Read documentation and build e.g. using configure– make and make install to build and install– Update your environment

• Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH

• Compile with -lMyNewLib

Using the Make Utility

• Used to compile and link programs• Makefile tells make how to perform link and

compilation• Consists of rules with the following shape

target …… : dependencies ……

command

……………

make

• target name of file generated by a program• dependency used as input to create target• Target files are created whenever a dependency has changed• Commands can include

– cc, CC, g++, f77, f95, mpf77

• make• make clean

make target

• Perform actions to obtain a target from a set of dependecies

• Make checks when dependencies last updated

target : dependencies

rule

Simple Makefile ….. almost trivial!game : game.o

gcc -o game game.o game.o : game.c

gcc -c game.c

clean :rm game game.o

Simple Makefile

• Generates executable called game from a single source file called game.c

• Has a sequence of rules– game

• Rule for building target executable file

– game.o• Rule for building object files

– clean• Rule for cleaning executable and object files

Make multiple source file projectproject : main.o data.o io.o

CC -o project main.o data.o io.o main.o : main.c io.h data.h

CC -c main.c

data.o : data.c io.h data.hCC -c data.c

io.o : io.c io.hCC -c io.c

clean :rm project main.o data.o io.o

Hints for Building Makefiles

• Use # at the start of a line for comments• Use \ at the end of a line for line continuation• The line defining the rule that follows the definition of

target and dependencies should normally be indented using a tab character and NOT whitespace characters

Makefile with implict rules for compiling a static library

objects = vec.o vecpair.o mat.o

flags = -fast -tp k8-64 libmyutil.a : $(objects)

ar -r -o myutil.a $(objects) $(flags)

vec.o : vec.cpgCC -c vec.c $(flags)

vecpair.o : vecpair.cpgCC -c vecpair.c $(flags)

mat.o : mat.cpgCC -c mat.c $(flags)

clean :rm myutil.a $(objects)

Macros Used with Makefiles

$@ Full name of the current target . $< The source file of the current (single) dependency . $* The part of a filename which matched a suffix rule. $? The names of all the dependencies newer than the target separated by spaces. $^ The names of all the dependencies separated by spaces, but with duplicate names removed.

Suffixes

• Make uses a special target, named .SUFFIXES to allow you to define your own suffixes.

• For example, the dependency line:.SUFFIXES: .foo .bar– tells make that you will be using these special suffixes to

make your own rules.

Custom Suffix Rule

• Similar to how make already knows how to make a .o file from a .c file, you can define rules in the following manner:

.foo.bar: tr '[A-Z][a-z]' '[N-Z][A-M][n-z][a-m]' < $< > $@ .c.o: $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $<

• The first rule allows you to create a .bar file from a .foo file. (Don't worry about what it does, it basically scrambles the file.)

• The second rule is the default rule used by make to create a .o file from a .c file.

Makefile with suffix rule

objects = blastest.o

flags = -fast -tp k8-64

mk4 : $(objects)pgCC -o mk4 $(objects) $(flags)

.c.o:pgCC -c $(flags) $<

clean :rm mk4 $(objects)

Using Eclipse

• Advantages• Starting

Using Eclipse: Advantages

• Open source• Available for many platforms

– Windows requires cygwin and gnu development tools g++, g77, gdb, gmake, stl etc..

• Use to develop wide variety of applications in a single development environment– e.g. c, c++, f77, f90, java

Eclipse features

• Perspectives for java, C/C++, debug and soon fortran development

• Multiple projects• Browsers

– Help, members, types, namespaces

• Interactive debugging• Build projects using make or ant

Starting eclipse

• Type “eclipse”• Requests directory for workspace

– N.B. Sometimes necessary to start eclipse using– eclipse -vm $JAVA_HOME/jre/bin/java

Eclipse C/C++ Perspective Layout

Creating a new project

• Managed make project– Helloworld

• Standard make project– Hellotest– Provide a make file

Creating a standard make project

Editing Project Settings

Finishing Steps

Debug WindowSwitch

between perspecti

ves

Debug window

s

Debug steppingcontrols

Running the Debugger

Setting and Modifying Breakpoint Properties

Right click here to toggle breakpoi

nt

Right click here

to edit breakpoin

t propertie

s

Links

• http://www.eclipse.org/• http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/os-e

cc/– A useful tutorial on the eclipse cdt

• http://www.cplusplus.com– Very useful reference section