NAS Parallel Benchmarks ( NPB ) are a set of benchmarks targeting performance evaluation of highly parallel supercomputers . They are developed and maintained by the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division (formerly the NASA Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation Program) based at the NASA Ames Research Center . NAS solicits performance results for NPB from all sources.
8-707: Traditional benchmarks that existed before NPB, such as the Livermore loops , the LINPACK Benchmark and the NAS Kernel Benchmark Program , were usually specialized for vector computers. They generally suffered from inadequacies including parallelism-impeding tuning restrictions and insufficient problem sizes, which rendered them inappropriate for highly parallel systems. Equally unsuitable were full-scale application benchmarks due to high porting cost and unavailability of automatic software parallelization tools. As
16-440: A result, NPB were developed in 1991 and released in 1992 to address the ensuing lack of benchmarks applicable to highly parallel machines. The first specification of NPB recognized that the benchmarks should feature In the light of these guidelines, it was deemed the only viable approach to use a collection of "paper-and-pencil" benchmarks that specified a set of problems only algorithmically and left most implementation details to
24-542: A set of multi-zone benchmarks taking advantage of the MPI/OpenMP hybrid programming model were released under the name NPB-Multi-Zone ( NPB-MZ ) for "testing the effectiveness of multi-level and hybrid parallelization paradigms and tools". As of NPB 3.3, eleven benchmarks are defined as summarized in the following table. Livermore loops Livermore loops (also known as the Livermore Fortran kernels or LFK )
32-572: Is a benchmark for parallel computers . It was created by Francis H. McMahon from scientific source code run on computers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . It consists of 24 do loops , some of which can be vectorized, and some of which cannot. The benchmark was published in 1986 in Livermore fortran kernels: A computer test of numerical performance range . The Livermore loops were originally written in Fortran , but have since been ported to many programming languages. Each loop carries out
40-508: The MPI implementation from NPB 2 and came in more flavors, namely OpenMP , Java and High Performance Fortran . These new parallel implementations were derived from the serial codes in NPB 2.3 with additional optimizations. NPB 3.1 and NPB 3.2 added three more benchmarks, which, however, were not available across all implementations; NPB 3.3 introduced a Class E problem size. Based on the single-zone NPB 3,
48-495: The development of supercomputers as the latter continued to evolve. NPB 2, released in 1996, came with source code implementations for five out of eight benchmarks defined in NPB 1 to supplement but not replace NPB 1. It extended the benchmarks with an up-to-date problem size Class C . It also amended the rules for submitting benchmarking results. The new rules included explicit requests for output files as well as modified source files and build scripts to ensure public availability of
56-731: The implementer's discretion under certain necessary limits. NPB 1 defined eight benchmarks, each in two problem sizes dubbed Class A and Class B . Sample codes written in Fortran 77 were supplied. They used a small problem size Class S and were not intended for benchmarking purposes. Since its release, NPB 1 displayed two major weaknesses. Firstly, due to its "paper-and-pencil" specification, computer vendors usually highly tuned their implementations so that their performance became difficult for scientific programmers to attain. Secondly, many of these implementation were proprietary and not publicly available, effectively concealing their optimizing techniques. Secondly, problem sizes of NPB 1 lagged behind
64-562: The modifications and reproducibility of the results. NPB 2.2 contained implementations of two more benchmarks. NPB 2.3 of 1997 was the first complete implementation in MPI . It shipped with serial versions of the benchmarks consistent with the parallel versions and defined a problem size Class W for small-memory systems. NPB 2.4 of 2002 offered a new MPI implementation and introduced another still larger problem size Class D . It also augmented one benchmark with I/O -intensive subtypes. NPB 3 retained
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