Introdution to Power-Aware HPC
Lecture in the winter-term 2020/21
Prof. Dr. D. Kranzlmüller,
Dr. Hayk Shoukourian
This course will be held in English!
Welcome to the course webpage for Introdution to Power-Aware HPC for winter-term 2020/21 at LMU Munich. Here you will be able to find the details on the lecture and the accompanying practical project.
News
23.03.2021
The retake of the exam is now set for Friday, 09.04.2021 starting from 15:00 CEST. Please do not forget to register via UNI2WORK framework. Registration and de-registration
deadline is set for 04.04.2021 23:59:59 CEST. Corresponding zoom link and individual examination time slots will be circulated to students who have registered to the exam via UNI2WORK framework.
11.02.2021
The oral examination results are now available via UNI2WORK framework.
04.02.2021
All students, registered for the exam, have been assigned a time slot and have been also notified on the connection details.
12.01.2021
The examination date is set for
Thursday, 11.02.2021. There will be an oral examination. Please do not forget to register via UNI2WORK framework. Registration and de-registration
deadline is set for 02.02.2021 23:59:59 CET. Corresponding zoom link will be circulated to students who have registered to the exam.
23.12.2020
Based on the kind request from students, as agreed during todays lecture, the
project submission deadline has been
shifted from 12.01.2021
to 20.01.2021 EOB and the student
presentation from 20.01.2021 to
27.01.2021.
The
next lecture will be on 13.01.2021.
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
26.10.2020
Connection details have been communicated to all registered students via Uni2Work framework.
26.10.2020
Due to current COVID-19 related situation, it is decided to hold the lecture online. We will be using Zoom remote conferencing service. Please ensure that the
Zoom Client is installed on your side prior joining the meeting. The connection specifics will be announced soon to all registered participants. Please note the
Rules for Online Teaching.
12.10.2020
Please note that the lecture room has been modified. The lectures will be held in the room
A 120, Hauptgebaeude/Main Building.
20.08.2020
Welcome to the course webpage Introdution to Power-Aware HPC for winter-term 2020/21 at LMU Munich.
- Registration will be opened on the 3rd of September via UNI2WORK
(NOTE: registration closes on 11.10.2020 at 18:00)
- The lectures are scheduled for Wednesdays from 10:00 to 12:00. The first lecture will take place on 04.11.2020 at 10:00. The room number is 220 (Amalienstr. 73A)
Contents of the lecture
Some of the current High Performance Computing (HPC) systems already consume more than 15 MW of power - a sufficient amount of power for sustaining a small city.
Energy consumption is becoming a dominating factor for the Total Cost of Ownership of many HPC systems, making high-performance design and energy-efficient design in
many ways synonymous.
Apart from the high power bills, power consumptions of these magnitudes act as a limiting factor in building and operating Exascale systems, i.e. next generation of HPC systems that are capable of performing 1018 floating point operations per second. This could already cause the entire
data center's power delivery and cooling infrastructures to breach the safety limits as well as affect the environmental sustainability by producing high carbon footprint.
Therefore, it is important to be preemptive in improving energy/power efficiency of HPC data centers.
This course explores different energy consumption issues in modern HPC data centers, discusses their impacts on the design of new computing systems and presents different strategies that aim to reduce the overall power consumption.
The lecture will cover the main concepts of energy consumption paradigms that should remain valid despite the continuous technological changes in the area.
Upon completion of this course the participants should acquire knowledge on:
- the importance of power/energy-efficiency for modern data centers
- the theory behind a variety of impacts that power dissipation in a CMOS chip has on HPC data centers
- contemporary tools for monitoring different power consumption related metrics
- diverse techniques on energy-efficiency tuning
- power-related challenges for next generation HPC systems
- contemporary resource management and scheduling techniques that are tuned for energy-efficiency
- power variation in homogeneous HPC systems and the potential of possible cost savings
- Intel's Model Specific Registers (MSRs) used for power management support
- principles of various machine learning techniques and their applications for intelligent power management
- high-frequency data collection techniques
- datacenter basics (understand the building blocks of modern datacenters and learn about possible architectures)
Audience
The course is intended for master students of computer science and related fields. The lecture and the project work have a cumulative weight of 6 ECTS.
More formally, in German:
Die Vorlesung richtet sich an Master-Studierende der Informatik. Für die Vorlesung und die Projektarbeit werden 6 ECTS-Punkte vergeben.
The number of students will be limited to 20. The registration will open 03.09.2020 from 08:00 via UNI2WORK and will close on 11.10.2020 at 18:00.
Prerequisites:
- Python knowledge
- Interest in energy-efficient supercomputing
- Interest in developing machine-learning frameworks
Dates
- Lecture: Wednesdays, 10:15 to 11:45 ONLINE. The connection details will be communicated to all registered participants.
in room 220 in Amalienstr. 73A A 120, Hauptgebaeude/Main Building. The first lecture will be held on 4th of November 2020 (online, via zoom).
- Guided Tour at Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ): TBA. Meeting point: LRZ, 85748 Garching bei Muenchen.
- Exam: TBA (see the exam section for more details)
- Repeat Exam: TBA (see the exam section for more details)
Project: "Increasing Cooling Efficiency of a Data Center"
This project aims at building Machine-Learning (ML) based models for predicting the power consumption of a HPC data center's cooling loop.
Participants will form groups, where each group will be assigned with an annual operational data obtained at Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ).
The provided data will contain various sensor measurements from LRZ's building infrastructure.
Each group of students would need to analyze the data, design and develop a ML-based model capable of predicting the power consumption of LRZ's warm-water cooling loop.
During this project students will gain an experience that could be applied not only to HPC data centers but also to other domains involving ML-based modeling.
The detailed description of the project assignment will follow during the lecture.
The training data can be found here Project Section.
Exam
There will be an oral examination (closed book) which will be held on Thursday, 11th of February 2021.
The examination will start at 09:00. Corresponding time slots and the zoom link will be circulated to students who have registered to the exam.
DATE: 11.02.2021
TIME: 09:00
ROOM: Online
Please do not forget to register via UNI2WORK framework. Registration and de-registration deadline is set for 02.02.2021 23:59:59 CET.
The retake of the exam is scheduled for:
DATE: Friday, 09.04.2021
TIME: starting from 15:00 CEST
ROOM: Online
Don't forget to register via
Uni2Work.
Registration and de-registration are possible: before Sunday, 04.04.2021 23:59:59 CEST
Scripts
The lecture notes are available in the Download Section.
Literature
CMOS VLSI Design: A Circuits and Systems Perspective (4th Edition) by Neil Weste, David Harris
Computer Organization and Design RISC-V Edition: The Hardware Software Interface by David A. Patterson, John L. Hennessy
Energy-Efficient Distributed Computing Systems by Albert Y. Zomaya, Young Choon Lee
Machine Learning: A Probabilistic Perspective by Kevin P. Murphy
Machine Learning: An Algorithmic Perspective, second edition by Stephen Marsland
Introduction to Apache Flink: Stream Processing for Real Time and Beyond By Ellen, M.D. Friedman, Kostas Tzoumas
The Data Center as a Computer by Luiz André Barroso, Jimmy Clidaras, Urs Hölzle
Additional scholary articles: sources will be indicated in the course slides
Regeln zur Online-Lehre
Sehr viele Lehrveranstaltungen finden online statt. Als Dozenten bitten wir um Nachsicht, falls Dinge nicht immer perfekt laufen und hoffen auf Ihre konstruktive Mitarbeit. In dieser Situation gelten zudem online einige Regeln, die im realen Leben ohnehin klar wären, auf die wir hier aber explizit hinweisen möchten:
- In Live-Veranstaltungen bitten wir um einen disziplinierten Umgang mit Audio (normalerweise aus) und Bandbreite (Video nach Bedarf)
- Die Aufzeichnung oder Weiterleitung von Veranstaltungen durch Teilnehmer sind nicht erlaubt.
- Die Verteilung von Inhalten (Video, Audio, Bilder, PDFs, etc.) in anderen Kanälen als den vom Autor vorgesehenen ist nicht erlaubt.
Wer eine dieser Regeln verletzt, muss damit rechnen, von der fraglichen Veranstaltung ausgeschlossen zu werden und wir behalten uns weitere Schritte vor. Mit allen anderen freuen wir uns auf das gemeinsame Experiment "Online-Semester".
Rules for Online Teaching
Most teaching happens currently online. As lecturers, we ask you to be forgiving if things should not work perfectly right away, and we hope for your constructive participation. In this situation, we would also like to explicitly point out some rules, which would be self-evident in real life:
- In live meetings, we ask you to responsibly deal with audio (off by default) and bandwidth (video as needed).
- Recording or redirecting streams by participants is not allowed.
- Distributing content (video, audio, images, PDFs, etc.) in other channels than those foreseen by the author is not allowed.
If you violate one of these rules, you can expect to be expelled from the respective course, and we reserve the right for further action. With all others, we are looking forward to the joint experiment of an "online semester".
Contact
Via
email, or per appointment, or after lectures.