June 17, 2013
Conference Paper

Tracking the Performance Evolution of Blue Gene Systems

Abstract

— IBM’s Blue Gene supercomputer has evolved through three generations from the original Blue Gene/L to P to Q. A higher level of integration has enabled greater single-core performance, and a larger concurrency per compute node. Although these changes have brought with them a higher overall system peak-performance, no study has examined in detail the evolution of perfor-mance across system generations. In this work we make two significant contri-butions – that of providing a comparative performance analysis across Blue Gene generations using a consistent set of tests, and also in providing a validat-ed performance model of the NEK-Bone proxy application. The combination of empirical analysis and the predictive performance model enable us to not only directly compare measured performance but also allow for a comparison of sys-tem configurations that cannot currently be measured. We provide insights into how the changing characteristics of Blue Gene have impacted on the application performance, as well as what future systems may be able to achieve.

Revised: April 28, 2015 | Published: June 17, 2013

Citation

Kerbyson D.J., K.J. Barker, D.S. Gallo, D. Chen, J.R. Brunheroto, K.D. Ryu, and G.L. Chiu, et al. 2013. Tracking the Performance Evolution of Blue Gene Systems. In Supercomputing: 28th International Supercomputing Conference (ISC 2013), June 16-20, 2013, Leipzig, Germany. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, edited by JM Kunkel, T Ludwig and HW Meuer, 7905, 317-329. Berlin:Springer-Verlag. PNNL-SA-94949. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-38750-0_24