DocumentCode
56371
Title
Porting an explicit time-domain volume-integral-equation solver on gpus with openacc [open problems in cem]
Author
Feki, Saber ; Al-Jarro, Ahmed ; Clo, Alain ; Bagci, Hakan
Author_Institution
KAUST Supercomputing Laboratory
Volume
56
Issue
2
fYear
2014
fDate
Apr-14
Firstpage
265
Lastpage
277
Abstract
Graphics processing units (GPUs) are gradually becoming mainstream in high-performance computing, as their capabilities for enhancing performance of a large spectrum of scientific applications to many fold when compared to multi-core CPUs have been clearly identified and proven. In this paper, implementation and performance-tuning details for porting an explicit marching-on-in-time (MOT)-based time-domain volume-integral-equation (TDVIE) solver onto GPUs are described in detail. To this end, a high-level approach, utilizing the OpenACC directive-based parallel programming model, is used to minimize two often-faced challenges in GPU programming: developer productivity and code portability. The MOT-TDVIE solver code, originally developed for CPUs, is annotated with compiler directives to port it to GPUs in a fashion similar to how OpenMP targets multi-core CPUs. In contrast to CUDA and OpenCL, where significant modifications to CPU-based codes are required, this high-level approach therefore requires minimal changes to the codes. In this work, we make use of two available OpenACC compilers, CAPS and PGI. Our experience reveals that different annotations of the code are required for each of the compilers, due to different interpretations of the fairly new standard by the compiler developers. Both versions of the OpenACC accelerated code achieved significant performance improvements, with up to 30¿¿ speedup against the sequential CPU code using recent hardware technology. Moreover, we demonstrated that the GPU-accelerated fully explicit MOT-TDVIE solver leveraged energy-consumption gains of the order of 3¿¿ against its CPU counterpart.
Keywords
Acceleration; Convolutional codes; Finite element analysis; Graphics processing units; Programming; Time-domain analysis; OpenACC; Time domain volume integral equation; explicit marching-on-in-time scheme; graphics processing unit (GPU); parallel processing; parallel programming;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9243
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MAP.2014.6837098
Filename
6837098
Link To Document