BOPS, Not FLOPS! A New Metric, Measuring Tool, and Roofline Performance Model For Datacenter Computing
The past decades witness FLOPS (Floating-point Operations per Second), as an important computation-centric performance metric, guides computer architecture evolution, bridges hardware and software co-design, and provides quantitative performance number for system optimization. However, for emerging datacenter computing (in short, DC) workloads, such as internet services or big data analytics, previous work reports on the modern CPU architecture that the average proportion of floating-point instructions only takes 1 FLOPS efficiency is only 0.1 63 for evaluating DC computer systems. To address the above issue, we propose a new computation-centric metric BOPS (Basic OPerations per Second). In our definition, Basic Operations include all of arithmetic, logical, comparing and array addressing operations for integer and floating point. BOPS is the average number of BOPs (Basic OPerations) completed each second. To that end, we present a dwarf-based measuring tool to evaluate DC computer systems in terms of our new metrics. On the basis of BOPS, also we propose a new roofline performance model for DC computing. Through the experiments, we demonstrate that our new metrics--BOPS, measuring tool, and new performance model indeed facilitate DC computer system design and optimization.
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