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Title: On the path to enable multi-scale biomolecular simulations on Petaflop supercomputer with multi-core processors

Conference ·
OSTI ID:1014211

Biological processes occurring inside cell involve multiple scales of time and length; many popular theoretical and computational multi-scale techniques utilize biomolecular simulations based on molecular dynamics. Till recently, the computing power required for simulating the relevant scales was even beyond the reach of fastest supercomputers. The availability of petaFLOPS-scale computing power in near future holds great promise. Unfortunately, the bio-simulations software technology has not kept up with the changes in hardware. In particular, with the introduction of multi-core processing technologies in systems with tens of thousands of processing cores, it is unclear whether the existing biomolecular simulation frameworks will be able to scale and to utilize these resources effectively. While the multicore processing systems provide higher processing capabilities, their memory and IO subsystems are posing new challenges to application and system software developers. In this preliminary study, we attempt to characterize computation, communication and memory efficiencies of bio-molecular simulations on a Cray XT3 system, which has recently been upgraded to dual-core Opteron processors. We identify that the application efficiencies using the multi-core processors reduce with the increase of the simulated system size. Further, we measure the communication overhead of using both cores in the processor simultaneously and identify that the MPI communication performance can be as low as 50% as compared to the single-core execution times. We conclude that not only the biomolecular simulations need to be aware of the underlying multi-core hardware in order to achieve maximum performance but also the system software needs to provide processor and memory placement features in the high-end systems. Our results on a stand-alone dual-core AMD system confirm that combinations of processor and memory affinity schemes can result in over 12% performance gains.

Research Organization:
Oak Ridge National Lab. (ORNL), Oak Ridge, TN (United States). National Center for Computational Sciences (NCCS)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC)
DOE Contract Number:
DE-AC05-00OR22725
OSTI ID:
1014211
Resource Relation:
Conference: Sixth IEEE International Workshop on High Performance Computational Biology, Long Beach, CA, USA, 20070326, 20070326
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English