Computer Engineering / Bilgisayar Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/10

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • Conference Object
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 3
    Adopting Heterogeneous Computing Modules: Experiences From a Touch Summer Workshop
    (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2022) Bunde, D.P.; Ahmed, K.; Ayloo, S.; Brown-Gaines, T.; Fuentes, J.; Jatala, V.; Yeh, T.Y.
    We present efforts to encourage the adoption of modules for teaching heterogeneous parallel computing through a faculty development workshop. The workshop was held remotely using a novel format to exploit the advantages of a virtual format and mitigate its disadvantages. Adoption at a wide variety of institutions showed module effectiveness and also gathered feedback leading to several module improvements. We also report on the adoptions themselves, which show the importance of supporting adaptation of the modules for diverse settings. © 2022 IEEE.
  • Article
    Soft Error Vulnerability Prediction of Gpgpu Applications
    (Springer, 2022) Topçu, Burak; Öz, Işıl
    As graphics processing units (GPUs) evolve to offer high performance for general-purpose computations in addition to inherently fault-tolerant graphics applications, soft error reliability becomes a significant concern. Fault injection provides a method of evaluating the soft error vulnerability of target programs. Since performing fault injection experiments for complex GPU hardware structures takes impractical times, the prediction-based techniques to evaluate the soft error vulnerability of general-purpose GPU (GPGPU) programs based on metrics from different domains get crucial for both HPC developers and GPU vendors. In this work, we propose machine learning (ML)-based prediction frameworks for the soft error vulnerability evaluation of GPGPU programs. We consider program characteristics, hardware usage and performance metrics collected from the simulation and the profiling tools. While we utilize regression models to predict the masked fault rates, we build classification models to specify the vulnerability level of the GPGPU programs based on their silent data corruption (SDC) and crash rates. Our prediction models achieve maximum prediction accuracy rates of 95.9, 88.46, and 85.7% for masked fault rates, SDCs, and crashes, respectively
  • Article
    Performance and Accuracy Predictions of Approximation Methods for Shortest-Path Algorithms on Gpus
    (Elsevier, 2022) Aktılav, Busenur; Öz, Işıl
    Approximate computing techniques, where less-than-perfect solutions are acceptable, present performance-accuracy trade-offs by performing inexact computations. Moreover, heterogeneous architectures, a combination of miscellaneous compute units, offer high performance as well as energy efficiency. Graph algorithms utilize the parallel computation units of heterogeneous GPU architectures as well as performance improvements offered by approximation methods. Since different approximations yield different speedup and accuracy loss for the target execution, it becomes impractical to test all methods with various parameters. In this work, we perform approximate computations for the three shortest-path graph algorithms and propose a machine learning framework to predict the impact of the approximations on program performance and output accuracy. We evaluate random predictions for both synthetic and real road-network graphs, and predictions of the large graph cases from small graph instances. We achieve less than 5% prediction error rates for speedup and inaccuracy values.
  • Conference Object
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 2
    Predicting the Soft Error Vulnerability of Gpgpu Applications
    (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2022) Topçu, Burak; Öz, Işıl
    As Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) have evolved to deliver performance increases for general-purpose computations as well as graphics and multimedia applications, soft error reliability becomes an important concern. The soft error vulnerability of the applications is evaluated via fault injection experiments. Since performing fault injection takes impractical times to cover the fault locations in complex GPU hardware structures, prediction-based techniques have been proposed to evaluate the soft error vulnerability of General-Purpose GPU (GPGPU) programs based on the hardware performance characteristics.In this work, we propose ML-based prediction models for the soft error vulnerability evaluation of GPGPU programs. We consider both program characteristics and hardware performance metrics collected from either the simulation or the profiling tools. While we utilize regression models for the prediction of the masked fault rates, we build classification models to specify the vulnerability level of the programs based on their silent data corruption (SDC) and crash rates. Our prediction models achieve maximum prediction accuracy rates of 96.6%, 82.6%, and 87% for masked fault rates, SDCs, and crashes, respectively.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 4
    Citation - Scopus: 4
    Predicting the Soft Error Vulnerability of Parallel Applications Using Machine Learning
    (Springer, 2021) Öz, Işıl; Arslan, Sanem
    With the widespread use of the multicore systems having smaller transistor sizes, soft errors become an important issue for parallel program execution. Fault injection is a prevalent method to quantify the soft error rates of the applications. However, it is very time consuming to perform detailed fault injection experiments. Therefore, prediction-based techniques have been proposed to evaluate the soft error vulnerability in a faster way. In this work, we present a soft error vulnerability prediction approach for parallel applications using machine learning algorithms. We define a set of features including thread communication, data sharing, parallel programming, and performance characteristics; and train our models based on three ML algorithms. This study uses the parallel programming features, as well as the combination of all features for the first time in vulnerability prediction of parallel programs. We propose two models for the soft error vulnerability prediction: (1) A regression model with rigorous feature selection analysis that estimates correct execution rates, (2) A novel classification model that predicts the vulnerability level of the target programs. We get maximum prediction accuracy rate of 73.2% for the regression-based model, and achieve 89% F-score for our classification model.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 9
    Citation - Scopus: 8
    Scalable Parallel Implementation of Migrating Birds Optimization for the Multi-Objective Task Allocation Problem
    (Springer Verlag, 2021) Öz, Dindar; Öz, Işıl
    As the distributed computing systems have been widely used in many research and industrial areas, the problem of allocating tasks to available processors in the system efficiently has been an important concern. Since the problem is proven to be NP-hard, heuristic-based optimization techniques have been proposed to solve the task allocation problem. Particularly, the current cloud-based systems have been grown massively requiring multiple features like lower cost, higher reliability, and higher throughput; therefore, the problem has become more challenging and approximate methods have gained more importance. Migrating birds optimization (MBO) algorithm offers successful solutions, especially for quadratic assignment problems. Inspired by the movement of the birds, it exhibits good results by its population-based approach . Since the algorithm needs to deal with many individuals in the population, and the neighbor solution generation phase takes substantial time for large problem instances, we need parallelism to have execution time improvements and make the algorithm practical for large-scale problems. In this work, we propose a scalable parallel implementation of the MBO algorithm, PMBO, for the multi-objective task allocation problem. We redesigned the implementation of the MBO algorithm so that its computationally heavy independent tasks are executed concurrently in separate threads. We compare our implementation with three parallel island-based approaches. The experimental results demonstrate that our implementation exhibits substantial solution quality improvements for difficult problem instances as the computing resources, namely parallelism, increase. Our scalability analysis also presents that higher parallelism levels offer larger solution improvement for the PMBO over the island-based parallel implementations on very hard problem instances.