Understanding Memory Access Patterns Using the BSC Performance Tools

05/12/2020
by   Harald Servat, et al.
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The growing gap between processor and memory speeds results in complex memory hierarchies as processors evolve to mitigate such divergence by taking advantage of the locality of reference. In this direction, the BSC performance analysis tools have been recently extended to provide insight relative to the application memory accesses depicting their temporal and spatial characteristics, correlating with the source-code and the achieved performance simultaneously. These extensions rely on the Precise Event-Based Sampling (PEBS) mechanism available in recent Intel processors to capture information regarding the application memory accesses. The sampled information is later combined with the Folding technique to represent a detailed temporal evolution of the memory accesses and in conjunction with the achieved performance and the source-code counterpart. The results obtained from the combination of these tools help not only application developers but also processor architects to understand better how the application behaves and how the system performs. In this paper, we describe a tighter integration of the sampling mechanism into the monitoring package. We also demonstrate the value of the complete workflow by exploring already optimized state–of–the–art benchmarks, providing detailed insight of their memory access behavior. We have taken advantage of this insight to apply small modifications that improve the applications' performance.

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