ARCHER2 MPI course (February 2023)

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

The world's largest supercomputers are used almost exclusively to run applications which are parallelised using Message Passing. The course covers all the basic knowledge required to write parallel programs using this programming model, and is directly applicable to almost every parallel computer architecture.

Parallel programming by definition involves co-operation between processes to solve a common task. The programmer has to define the tasks that will be executed by the processors, and also how these tasks are to synchronise and exchange data with one another. In the message-passing model the tasks are separate processes that communicate and synchronise by explicitly sending each other messages. All these parallel operations are performed via calls to some message-passing interface that is entirely responsible for interfacing with the physical communication network linking the actual processors together. This course uses the de facto standard for message passing, the Message Passing Interface (MPI). It covers point-to-point communication, non-blocking operations, derived datatypes, virtual topologies, collective communication and general design issues.

The course is normally delivered in an intensive three-day format using EPCC's dedicated training facilities. It is taught using a variety of methods including formal lectures, practical exercises, programming examples and informal tutorial discussions. This enables lecture material to be supported by the tutored practical sessions in order to reinforce the key concepts.

Intended Learning Outcomes

On completion of this course students should be able to:

  • Understand the message-passing model in detail.

  • Implement standard message-passing algorithms in MPI.

  • Debug simple MPI codes.

  • Measure and comment on the performance of MPI codes.

  • Design and implement efficient parallel programs to solve regular-grid problems.

Pre-requisite Programming Languages:

C, C++ or Fortran. The course does not cover the details of how to use MPI from Python.

Message Passing Programming with MPI

Dates: 23rd, 24th and 30th March 2022

Location: Imperial College, London

Imperial College,
Seminar and Learning Centre,
5th Floor,
Sherfield Building,
London (Kensington Campus),
SW7 2BB

  • February 22, 2023 SALC 10
  • February 23, 2023 SALC 1
  • February 24, 2023 SALC 10

Viewing Images on ARCHER2

The instructions for viewing images, contained in the slides for the Case Study exercise on Day 3, will no longer work on ARCHER2 as the display program has different behaviour from before.

To view any of the PGM files (input edge data or output reconstructed images) you can use the pgmdisplay program:

user@archer2:~$ module load imagemagick
user@archer2:~$ pgmdisplay edge192x128.pgm

Note that the image may take some time to appear as exporting X11 graphics over the network can be rather slow.

Lecture Slides

Unless otherwise indicated all material is Copyright © EPCC, The University of Edinburgh, and is only made available for private study.

Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

See the instructions above for "Viewing Images on ARCHER2" - the method described in the Case Study lecture does not currently work correctly.

Notes

Exercise Material

Unless otherwise indicated all material is Copyright © EPCC, The University of Edinburgh, and is only made available for private study.

Installing MPI locally

Note that all registered users will be given access to the ARCHER2 system. Although having MPI installed on your laptop may be convenient, do not worry if these instructions do not work for you.

Linux

Linux users need to install the GNU compilers and a couple of MPI packages, e.g. for Ubuntu:

user@ubuntu$ sudo apt install gcc
user@ubuntu$ sudo apt install openmpi-bin
user@ubuntu$ sudo apt install libopenmpi-dev

Mac

Mac users need to install compilers from the Xcode developer package. It is easiest to install MPI using the Homebrew package manager - here are Instructions on how to install Xcode and Homebrew.

Now install OpenMPI:

user@mac$ brew install open-mpi

Windows

Rather than installing MPI locally, we recommend that Windows users access ARCHER2 using MobaXterm.

If you want to try local access to MPI, one solution is to install a Linux virtual machine (e.g. Ubuntu) and follow the Linux installation instructions above.

I know that some users have been able to install MPI compilers and libraries natively on Windows using the Intel® oneAPI HPC Toolkit


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0