DCNANADec 14, 2009

QR Factorization of Tall and Skinny Matrices in a Grid Computing Environment

arXiv:0912.257244 citations
Originality Incremental advance
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This work enables efficient execution of a key dense linear algebra kernel (QR factorization) on computational grids, which was previously limited to homogeneous supercomputers.

The paper addresses the problem of poor performance of dense linear algebra operations in grid computing environments. By combining a Communication Avoiding QR algorithm with a topology-aware middleware, they achieve linear speedup with the number of geographical sites, consistently outperforming ScaLAPACK.

Previous studies have reported that common dense linear algebra operations do not achieve speed up by using multiple geographical sites of a computational grid. Because such operations are the building blocks of most scientific applications, conventional supercomputers are still strongly predominant in high-performance computing and the use of grids for speeding up large-scale scientific problems is limited to applications exhibiting parallelism at a higher level. We have identified two performance bottlenecks in the distributed memory algorithms implemented in ScaLAPACK, a state-of-the-art dense linear algebra library. First, because ScaLAPACK assumes a homogeneous communication network, the implementations of ScaLAPACK algorithms lack locality in their communication pattern. Second, the number of messages sent in the ScaLAPACK algorithms is significantly greater than other algorithms that trade flops for communication. In this paper, we present a new approach for computing a QR factorization -- one of the main dense linear algebra kernels -- of tall and skinny matrices in a grid computing environment that overcomes these two bottlenecks. Our contribution is to articulate a recently proposed algorithm (Communication Avoiding QR) with a topology-aware middleware (QCG-OMPI) in order to confine intensive communications (ScaLAPACK calls) within the different geographical sites. An experimental study conducted on the Grid'5000 platform shows that the resulting performance increases linearly with the number of geographical sites on large-scale problems (and is in particular consistently higher than ScaLAPACK's).

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