I know from CUDA 5.5 that it is possible to have high-priority kernels, but I understand that this is only for calls issues by the same context on the GPU, i.e. it does not effect the priority for another process' kernel launches, as long as they have enough CPU time to be issued.
Is it possible to have high priority applications on the GPU, similarly to how you can set the OS to give priority to specific threads?
Thanks
Henrik Andresen
Technically, CUDA 5.5 added the ability to set individual stream priorities to the CUDA work scheduling system for compute capability 3.5 devices. This means that the CUDA driver will allow any operation kernel in a higher priority stream to preempt the driver level scheduling of operations in competing lower priority streams. This can include launching of kernels, copy operations and events to the device. I don't, however, believe that extends to any difference in execution priority once a kernel has been launched on the device itself, it is purely a driver side stream scheduling heuristic control.. This extends to preemption of running kernels from lower priority streams on the device when conditions for concurrent kernel execution exist.
To the best of my knowledge, there is currently no ability to extend that mechanism beyond streams within a single context, and there is no way to influence how processes competing for access to the GPU will be prioritised at the driver level. The only caveat I add to this is that CUDA 6 might have changed this, and I haven't yet had the opportunity to look at everything that is new in that release.
Related
Assume I have Nvidia K40, and for some reason, I want my code only uses portion of the Cuda cores(i.e instead of using all 2880 only use 400 cores for examples), is it possible?is it logical to do this either?
In addition, is there any way to see how many cores are being using by GPU when I run my code? In other words, can we check during execution, how many cores are being used by the code, report likes "task manger" in Windows or top in Linux?
It is possible, but the concept in a way goes against fundamental best practices for cuda. Not to say it couldn't be useful for something. For example if you want to run multiple kernels on the same GPU and for some reason want to allocate some number of Streaming Multiprocessors to each kernel. Maybe this could be beneficial for L1 caching of a kernel that does not have perfect memory access patterns (I still think for 99% of cases manual shared memory methods would be better).
How you could do this, would be to access the ptx identifiers %nsmid and %smid and put a conditional on the original launching of the kernels. You would have to only have 1 block per Streaming Multiprocessor (SM) and then return each kernel based on which kernel you want on which SM's.
I would warn that this method should be reserved for very experienced cuda programmers, and only done as a last resort for performance. Also, as mentioned in my comment, I remember reading that a threadblock could migrate from one SM to another, so behavior would have to be measured before implementation and could be hardware and cuda version dependent. However, since you asked and since I do believe it is possible (though not recommended), here are some resources to accomplish what you mention.
PTS register for SM index and number of SMs...
http://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/parallel-thread-execution/#identifiers
and how to use it in a cuda kernel without writing ptx directly...
https://gist.github.com/allanmac/4751080
Not sure, whether it works with the K40, but for newer Ampere GPUs there is the MIG Multi-Instance-GPU feature to partition GPUs.
https://docs.nvidia.com/datacenter/tesla/mig-user-guide/
I don't know such methods, but would like to get to know.
As to question 2, I suppose sometimes this can be useful. When you have complicated execution graphs, many kernels, some of which can be executed in parallel, you want to load GPU fully, most effectively. But it seems on its own GPU can occupy all SMs with single blocks of one kernel. I.e. if you have a kernel with 30-blocks grid and 30 SMs, this kernel can occupy entire GPU. I believe I saw such effect. Really this kernel will be faster (maybe 1.5x against 4 256-threads blocks per SM), but this will not be effective when you have another work.
GPU can't know whether we are going to run another kernel after this one with 30 blocks or not - whether it will be more effective to spread it onto all SMs or not. So some manual way to say this should exist
As to question 3, I suppose GPU profiling tools should show this, Visual Profiler and newer Parallel Nsight and Nsight Compute. But I didn't try. This will not be Task manager, but a statistics for kernels that were executed by your program instead.
As to possibility to move thread blocks between SMs when necessary,
#ChristianSarofeen, I can't find mentions that this is possible. Quite the countrary,
Each CUDA block is executed by one streaming multiprocessor (SM) and
cannot be migrated to other SMs in GPU (except during preemption,
debugging, or CUDA dynamic parallelism).
https://developer.nvidia.com/blog/cuda-refresher-cuda-programming-model/
Although starting from some architecture there is such thing as preemption. As I remember NVidia advertised it in the following way. Let's say you made a game that run some heavy kernels (say for graphics rendering). And then something unusual happened. You need to execute some not so heavy kernel as fast as possible. With preemption you can unload somehow running kernels and execute this high priority one. This increases execution time (of this high pr. kernel) a lot.
I also found such thing:
CUDA Graphs present a new model for work submission in CUDA. A graph
is a series of operations, such as kernel launches, connected by
dependencies, which is defined separately from its execution. This
allows a graph to be defined once and then launched repeatedly.
Separating out the definition of a graph from its execution enables a
number of optimizations: first, CPU launch costs are reduced compared
to streams, because much of the setup is done in advance; second,
presenting the whole workflow to CUDA enables optimizations which
might not be possible with the piecewise work submission mechanism of
streams.
https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/cuda-c-programming-guide/index.html#cuda-graphs
I do not believe kernels invocation take a lot of time (of course in case of a stream of kernels and if you don't await for results in between). If you call several kernels, it seems possible to send all necessary data for all kernels while the first kernel is executing on GPU. So I believe NVidia means that it runs several kernels in parallel and perform some smart load-balancing between SMs.
I have Tesla K20m GPU card from NVIDIA. In CUDA 5.0 onwards multiple processes from the same application on same GPU is allowed. Does CUDA allow execution of different applications on same GPU at the same time?
Depends what do you mean by 'at the same time'. If you mean 'two applications have CUDA contexts on same card at the same time' then yes.
Though you may want to use MPS to get full benefits and reduce context switching. See also this question.
Multiple applications may run at the same time on the same GPU. Namely, multiple applications can have a CUDA context at the same time and launch kernels, copy memory, etc...
But kernels from different CUDA contexts cannot be executed simultaneously on the same GPU. Meaning, at the very same slice of time, only kernels from a single CUDA context may be executed on a GPU. This may cause a GPU underutilization if kernels do not occupy the entire GPU resources (memory + compute), and some of the resources may be left unused.
MPS enables that by actually having a server with a single CUDA context, and all client processes communicate with the GPU device through this server, and eventually using its single CUDA context. This enables actual concurrency between kernel launches from different (logical) CUDA contexts.
Suppose I have 4 GPUs and would like to run 50 CUDA programs in parallel. My question is: is the NVIDIA driver smart enough to run the 50 CUDA programs on the different GPUs or do I have to set the CUDA device for each program?
thank you
The first point to make is that you cannot run 50 applications in parallel on 4 GPUs on just about any CUDA platform. If you have a Hyper-Q capable GPU, there is the possibility of up to 32 threads or MPI processes queuing work to the GPU. Otherwise there is a single command queue.
For anything other than the latest Kepler Tesla cards, CUDA driver only supports a single active context at a time. If you run more that one application on a GPU, the processes will both have contexts which just contend with one another in a "first come, first serve" basis. If one application blocks the other with a long running kernel or similar, there is no pre-emption or anything else which makes the process yield to another process. When the GPU is shared with a display manager, there is a watchdog timer that will impose an upper limit of a few seconds before the application will get its context killed. The result is that only one context ever runs on the hardware at a time. Context switching isn't free, and there is a performance penalty to having multiple processes contending for a single device.
Furthermore, every context present on a GPU requires device memory. On the platform you are asking about, linux, there is no memory paging, so every context's resources must coexist in GPU memory. I don't believe it would be possible to have 12 non-trivial contexts running on any current GPU simultaneously - you would run out of available memory well before that number. Trying to run more applications would result in an context establishment failure.
As for the behaviour of the driver distributing multiple applications on multiple GPUs, AFAIK the linux driver doesn't do any intelligent distribution of processes amongst GPUs, except when one or more of the GPUs are in a non-default compute mode. If no device is specifically requested, the driver will always try and find the first valid, free GPU it can run a process or thread on. If a GPU is busy and marked compute exclusive (either thread or process) or marked prohibited, then the driver will skip over it when trying to find a GPU to run on. If all GPUs are exclusive and occupied or prohibited, then the application will fail with a no valid device available error.
So in summary,for everything other than Hyper-Q devices, there is no performance gain in doing what you are asking about (quite the opposite) and I would expected it to break if you tried. A much saner approach would be to use compute exclusivity in combination with a resource managing task scheduler like Torque or one of the (former) Sun Grid Engine versions, which could schedule your processes to run in an orderly fashion according to the availability of GPUs. This is how most general purpose HPC clusters deal with scheduling in multi-gpu environments.
I know that NVIDIA gpus with compute capability 2.x or greater can execute u pto 16 kernels concurrently.
However, my application spawns 7 "processes" and each of these 7 processes launch CUDA kernels.
My first question is that what would be the expected behavior of these kernels. Will they execute concurrently as well or, since they are launched by different processes, they would execute sequentially.
I am confused because the CUDA C programming guide says:
"A kernel from one CUDA context cannot execute concurrently with a kernel from another CUDA context."
This brings me to my second question, what are CUDA "contexts"?
Thanks!
A CUDA context is a virtual execution space that holds the code and data owned by a host thread or process. Only one context can ever be active on a GPU with all current hardware.
So to answer your first question, if you have seven separate threads or processes all trying to establish a context and run on the same GPU simultaneously, they will be serialised and any process waiting for access to the GPU will be blocked until the owner of the running context yields. There is, to the best of my knowledge, no time slicing and the scheduling heuristics are not documented and (I would suspect) not uniform from operating system to operating system.
You would be better to launch a single worker thread holding a GPU context and use messaging from the other threads to push work onto the GPU. Alternatively there is a context migration facility available in the CUDA driver API, but that will only work with threads from the same process, and the migration mechanism has latency and host CPU overhead.
To add to the answer of #talonmies
In the newer architectures, by the use of MPS multiple processes can launch multiple kernels concurrently. So, now it is definitely possible which was not sometime before. For a detailed understanding read this article.
https://docs.nvidia.com/deploy/pdf/CUDA_Multi_Process_Service_Overview.pdf
Additionally, you can also see maximum number of concurrent kernels allowed per cuda compute capability type supported by different GPUs. Here is a link to that:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA#Version_features_and_specifications
For example a GPU with cuda compute capability of 7.5 can have maximum of 128 Cuda kernels launched to it.
Do you really need to have separate threads and contexts?
I believe that best practice is a usage one context per GPU, because multiple contexts on single GPU bring a sufficient overhead.
To execute many kernels concrurrenlty you should create few CUDA streams in one CUDA context and queue each kernel into its own stream - so they will be executed concurrently, if there are enough resources for it.
If you need to make the context accessible from few CPU threads - you can use cuCtxPopCurrent(), cuCtxPushCurrent() to pass them around, but only one thread will be able to work with the context at any time.
I have an application in which I would like to share a single GPU between multiple processes. That is, each of these processes would create its own CUDA or OpenCL context, targeting the same GPU. According to the Fermi white paper[1], application-level context switching is less then 25 microseconds, but the launches are effectively serialized as they launch on the GPU -- so Fermi wouldn't work well for this. According to the Kepler white paper[2], there is something called Hyper-Q that allows for up to 32 simultaneous connections from multiple CUDA streams, MPI processes, or threads within a process.
My questions: Has anyone tried this on a Kepler GPU and verified that its kernels are run concurrently when scheduled from distinct processes? Is this just a CUDA feature, or can it also be used with OpenCL on Nvidia GPUs? Do AMD's GPUs support something similar?
[1] http://www.nvidia.com/content/PDF/fermi_white_papers/NVIDIA_Fermi_Compute_Architecture_Whitepaper.pdf
[2] http://www.nvidia.com/content/PDF/kepler/NVIDIA-Kepler-GK110-Architecture-Whitepaper.pdf
In response to the first question, NVIDIA has published some hyper-Q results in a blog here. The blog is pointing out that the developers who were porting CP2K were able to get to accelerated results more quickly because hyper-Q allowed them to use the application's MPI structure more or less as-is and run multiple ranks on a single GPU, and get higher effective GPU utilization that way. As mentioned in the comments, this (hyper-Q) feature is only available on K20 processors currently, as it is dependent on the GK110 GPU.
I've run simultaneous kernels from Fermi architecture it works wonderfully and in fact, is often the only way to get high occupancy from your hardware. I used OpenCL and you need to run a separate command queue from a separate cpu thread in order to do this. Hyper-Q is the ability to dispatch new data parallel kernels from within another kernel. This is only on Kepler.