Jonathan: You posed a reasonable question, which was "when is RDMA worth the hassle?" I agree with part of your premises, which is that it only matters when the bottleneck isn't somewhere else. With a parallel file system, like Scale/GPFS, the absolute performance bottleneck is not the throughput of a single drive. In a majority of Scale/GPFS clusters the network data path is the performance limitation. If they deploy HDR or 100/200/400Gbps Ethernet... At that point, the buffer copy time inside the server matters.
When the device is an accelerator, like a GPU, the benefit of RDMA (GDS) is easily demonstrated because it eliminates the bounce copy through the system memory. In our NVIDIA DGX A100 server testing testing we were able to get around 2x the per system throughput by using RDMA direct to GPU (GUP Direct Storage). (Tested on 2 DGX system with 4x HDR links per storage node.) However, your question remains. Synthetic benchmarks are good indicators of technical benefit, but do your users and applications need that extra performance? These are probably only a handful of codes in organizations that need this. However, they are high-value use cases. We have client applications that either read a lot of data semi-randomly and not-cached - think mini-Epics for scaling ML training. Or, demand lowest response time, like production inference on voice recognition and NLP. If anyone has use cases for GPU accelerated codes with truly demanding data needs, please reach out directly. We are looking for more use cases to characterize the benefit for a new paper. f you can provide some code examples, we can help test if RDMA direct to GPU (GPUdirect Storage) is a benefit. Thanks, doug Douglas O'Flaherty dougla...@us.ibm.com ----- Message from Jonathan Buzzard <jonathan.buzz...@strath.ac.uk> on Fri, 10 Dec 2021 00:27:23 +0000 ----- To: gpfsug-discuss@spectrumscale.org Subject: Re: [gpfsug-discuss] On 09/12/2021 16:04, Douglas O'flaherty wrote: > > Though not directly about your design, our work with NVIDIA on GPUdirect > Storage and SuperPOD has shown how sensitive RDMA (IB & RoCE) to both > MOFED and Firmware version compatibility can be. > > I would suggest anyone debugging RDMA issues should look at those closely. > May I ask what are the alleged benefits of using RDMA in GPFS? I can see there would be lower latency over a plain IP Ethernet or IPoIB solution but surely disk latency is going to swamp that? I guess SSD drives might change that calculation but I have never seen proper benchmarks comparing the two, or even better yet all four connection options. Just seems a lot of complexity and fragility for very little gain to me. JAB. -- Jonathan A. Buzzard Tel: +44141-5483420 HPC System Administrator, ARCHIE-WeSt. University of Strathclyde, John Anderson Building, Glasgow. G4 0NG ----- Original message ----- From: "Jonathan Buzzard" <jonathan.buzz...@strath.ac.uk> Sent by: gpfsug-discuss-boun...@spectrumscale.org To: gpfsug-discuss@spectrumscale.org Cc: Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [gpfsug-discuss] alternate path between ESS Servers for Datamigration Date: Fri, Dec 10, 2021 10:27 On 09/12/2021 16:04, Douglas O'flaherty wrote: > > Though not directly about your design, our work with NVIDIA on GPUdirect > Storage and SuperPOD has shown how sensitive RDMA (IB & RoCE) to both > MOFED and Firmware version compatibility can be. > > I would suggest anyone debugging RDMA issues should look at those closely. > May I ask what are the alleged benefits of using RDMA in GPFS? I can see there would be lower latency over a plain IP Ethernet or IPoIB solution but surely disk latency is going to swamp that? I guess SSD drives might change that calculation but I have never seen proper benchmarks comparing the two, or even better yet all four connection options. Just seems a lot of complexity and fragility for very little gain to me. JAB. -- Jonathan A. Buzzard Tel: +44141-5483420 HPC System Administrator, ARCHIE-WeSt. University of Strathclyde, John Anderson Building, Glasgow. G4 0NG _______________________________________________ gpfsug-discuss mailing list gpfsug-discuss at spectrumscale.org http://gpfsug.org/mailman/listinfo/gpfsug-discuss
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