a return before a barrier (that happens only in some threads in
a workgroup) leads to UB.
While the old code actually works on some devices,
it fails on some others (i.e. "smaller" GPUs).
BTW, I think it would be better to set specialization constants
when the graph is built, in that way the local workgroup
could be sized appropriately.
But it would take a lot of work.
Signed-off-by: Salvatore Mesoraca <s.mesoraca16@gmail.com>
* ggml: Added run-time detection of neon, i8mm and sve
Adds run-time detection of the Arm instructions set features
neon, i8mm and sve for Linux and Apple build targets.
* ggml: Extend feature detection to include non aarch64 Arm arch
* ggml: Move definition of ggml_arm_arch_features to the global data section
* ggml : remove assert for AArch64 GEMV and GEMM Q4 kernels
* added fallback mechanism when the offline re-quantized model is not
optimized for the underlying target.
* fix for build errors
* remove prints from the low-level code
* Rebase to the latest upstream
Make sure n_barrier and n_barrier_passed do not share the cache line to avoid cache line bouncing.
This optimization shows performance improvements even for n_threads <= 8 cases.
Resurect TSAN (Thread Sanitizer) check so that we can avoid doing expensive read-modify-write
in the normal case and just use thread-fence as originally intended.
---
Here is the original description and suggestions from Willy Tarreau :
There's currently some false sharing between n_barrier and
n_barrier_passed that is amplified in ggml_barrier() by the fact that
all threads need to increment n_barrier when entering, while all
previous threads continue to read n_barrier_passed, waiting for the last
one to release them all. The side effect is that all these readers are
slowing down all new threads by making the cache line bounce back and
forth between readers and writers.
Just placing them in two distinct cache lines is sufficient to boost
the performance by 21% on a 80-core ARM server compared to the
no-openmp version, and by 3% compared to the openmp version.
Note that the variables could have been spread apart in the structure
as well, but it doesn't seem that the size of this threadpool struct is
critical so here we're simply aligning them.
Finally, the same issue was present when leaving the barrier since all
threads had to update the n_barrier_passed counter, though only one
would add a non-zero value. This alone is responsible for half of the
cost due to undesired serialization.
It might be possible that using a small array of n_barrier counters
could make things even faster on many-core systems, but it would likely
complicate the logic needed to detect the last thread.
Co-authored-by: Willy Tarreau <w@1wt.eu>
* AVX512 version of ggml_gemm_q4_0_8x8_q8_0
* Remove zero vector parameter passing
* Rename functions and rearrange order of macros
* Edit commments
* style : minor adjustments
* Update x to start from 0
---------
Co-authored-by: Georgi Gerganov <ggerganov@gmail.com>
* threadpool: skip polling for unused threads
Currently all threads do N polling rounds even if only 1 thread is active (n_threads_cur == 1).
This commit adds a check to skip the polling for unused threads (ith >= n_threads_cur).
n_threads_cur is now an atomic_int to explicitly tell thread sanitizer that it is written
from one thread and read from other threads (not a race conditions).
* threadpool: further simplify and improve ggml_barrier
Avoid using strict memory order while polling, yet make sure that all threads go through
full memory barrier (memory fence) on ggml_barrier entrace and exit.
* threads: add simple barrier test
This test does lots of small, parallel matmul ops where the barriers in between dominate the overhead.
* threadpool: improve thread sync for new-graphs
Using the same tricks as ggml_barrier. All the polling is done with relaxed memory order
to keep it efficient, once the new graph is detected we do full fence using read-modify-write
with strict memory order.
* threadpool: improve abort handling
Do not use threadpool->ec (exit code) to decide whether to exit the compute loop.
threadpool->ec is not atomic which makes thread-sanitizer rightfully unhappy about it.
Instead introduce atomic threadpool->abort flag used for this. This is consistent with
how we handle threadpool->stop or pause.
While at it add an explicit atomic_load for n_threads_cur for consistency.
* test-barrier: release threadpool before releasing the context
fixes use-after-free detected by gcc thread-sanitizer on x86-64
for some reason llvm sanitizer is not detecting this issue.