Tuning stationary iterative solvers for fault resilience

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Abstract

As the transistor's feature size decreases following Moore's Law, hardware will become more prone to permanent, intermittent, and transient errors, increasing the number of failures experienced by applications, and diminishing the confidence of users. As a result, resilience is considered the most difficult under addressed issue faced by the High Performance Computing community. In this paper, we address the design of error resilient iterative solvers for sparse linear systems. Contrary to most previous approaches, based on Krylov subspace methods, for this purpose we analyze stationary component-wise relaxation. Concretely, starting from a plain implementation of the Jacobi iteration, we design a low-cost component-wise technique that elegantly handles bit-flips, turning the initial synchronized solver into an asynchronous iteration. Our experimental study employs sparse incomplete factorizations from several practical applications to expose the convergence delay incurred by the fault-tolerant implementation.

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APA

Anzt, H., Dongarra, J., & Quintana-Ortí, E. S. (2015). Tuning stationary iterative solvers for fault resilience. In Proceedings of ScalA 2015: 6th Workshop on Latest Advances in Scalable Algorithms for Large-Scale Systems - Held in conjunction with SC 2015: The International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis. Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/2832080.2832081

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