Learn OpenMP with BNL’s free online tutorial

In today’s world of multi-core processors and accelerated systems, unlocking the power of parallel programming is no longer a niche skill – it’s a game-changer. BNL’s free online tutorial series on OpenMP allows you to learn OpenMP from wherever you are!

OpenMP is a powerful programming interface that simplifies parallel computing, allowing you to tap into the full potential of your hardware. By effectively parallelizing your applications, you can achieve significant performance gains, saving valuable time and resources.

This six-episode program, already underway, provides a comprehensive and convenient learning experience. Each episode, released monthly, delves into OpenMP concepts in an easy-to-follow format. The tutorial is presented by me and Michael Klemm, with one guest lecture by Ruud van der Pas, and technical information on using OpenMP compilers and tools by Helen He.

Head over to the event website to see the presented material, find links to the recordings available on YouTube, and register for the upcoming episodes. This is the complete agenda:

A convincing use case for LLMs in education

The use of large language models (LLMs) in the context of education continues to be a subject of intense discussion. This ranges from strictly forbidding their use as evil to avoiding any issue by considering them as better spell checkers. I am not going to enter the discussion here, but I want to contribute a convincing use case:

A screenshot showing Google Gemini summarizing the content of two slides and answering four questions on this content.

This screenshot – unfortunately in German – shows how I uploaded the introduction slide deck of my lecture PDP to Google Gemini and asked the questions we get asked most frequently:

1: Will there be any aids allowed in the exam?

2: Will there be an oral or a written exam?

3: In which format will the written exam be carried out?

4: Will there be a final Q&A session at the end of the lecture?

Gemini correctly answers all four questions. The slides showing part of the answer are on the screenshot’s right. I guess I will bring this screenshot to the Q&A session on July 16th to avoid the first four questions, and you should not take this blog post too seriously ;-).

OpenMP Tutorials at SC22

As in previous years, several OpenMP tutorial proposals have been accepted for SC22. I am really looking forward to being in the USA again, and – among other things – to teach OpenMP to real people, instead of black tiles. In this summary, I would like to highlight the two tutorials in which I am involved.

And by the way: in addition to the content itself, I believe these tutorials provide the extra value of direct access to members of the OpenMP Language Committee. That means we are approachable beyond the tutorial outline to discuss any topics, or any issues, you have with OpenMP.

Mastering Tasking with OpenMP

Since version 3.0 released in 2008, OpenMP offers tasking to support the creation of composable parallel software blocks and the parallelization of irregular algorithms. Mastering the tasking concept of OpenMP requires a change in the way developers reason about the structure of their code and how to expose the parallelism of it. Our tutorial addresses this critical aspect by examining the tasking concept in detail and presenting patterns as solutions to many common problems.

Presenters: Christian Terboven, Michael Klemm, Xavier Teruel and Bronis R. de Supinski

Content summary:

  • OpenMP Overview (high-level summary, synchronization, memory model)
  • OpenMP Tasking Model (overview, data sharing, taskloop)
  • Improving Tasking Performance (if + final + mergeable clauses, cut-off strategies, task dependencies, task affinity)
  • Cancellation Construct
  • Future OpenMP directions

Advanced OpenMP: Host Performance and 5.2 Features

Developers usually find OpenMP easy to learn. However, they are often disappointed with the performance and scalability of the resulting code. This stems not from shortcomings of OpenMP, but rather from the lack of depth with which it is employed. Our “Advanced OpenMP Programming” tutorial addresses this critical need by exploring the implications of possible OpenMP parallelization strategies, both in terms of correctness and performance.

Presenters: Christian Terboven, Michael Klemm, Ruud van der Pas, and Bronis R. de Supinski

Content summary:

  • OpenMP Overview (high-level summary, synchronization, memory model)
  • Techniques to obtain High Performance with OpenMP: memory access (memory placement, binding, NUMA) and vectorization (understanding SIMD, vectorization in OpenMP)
  • Advanced Language Features (doacross loops, user-defined reductions, atomics)
  • Future OpenMP directions

For a complete list of SC22 activities around OpenMP and associated with the OpenMP organization, please see this page listing tutorials, the Bof, and booth talks.

OpenMP in Small Bites (online tutorial with quizzes)

As a member of the hpc.nrw regional network, I have recorded 10 video sessions for an online OpenMP tutorial. Each part consists of a short video on one selected aspect of OpenMP, followed by a couple of quiz questions for self-control. The tutorial has been designed to be platform-independent and to work with every operating system with an OpenMP-compatible compiler available. However, my examples are limited to C/C++.

All material is provided under a Creative Commons license. The topics that are currently available are:

Overview

This part provides a brief history of OpenMP and then introduces the concept of the parallel region: find it here.

Worksharing

This part introduces the concept of OpenMP worksharing, loop scheduling, and the first synchronization mechanisms: find it here.

Data Scoping

This part provides an overview of one of the most challenging parts (well, probably at first sight) of OpenMP: data scoping. It discusses the differences between private, firstprivate, lastprivate and shared variables and also explains the reduction operation: find it here.

False Sharing

This part explains the concept of caches in parallel computer architectures, discusses the problem of false sharing, and shows how to avoid it: find it here.

Tasking

This part introduces task parallelism in OpenMP. This concept enables the programmer to parallelize code regions with non-canonical loops or regions which do not use loops at all (including recursive algorithms): find it here.

Tasking and Data Scoping

This part deepens the knowledge of OpenMP task parallelism and data scoping by using an artificial example: find it here.

Tasking and Synchronization

This session discusses different synchronization mechanisms for OpenMP task parallelism: find it here.

Loops and Tasks

This part presents the taskloop construct in OpenMP: find it here.

Task Scheduling

This part explains how task scheduling works in OpenMP: find it here.

Non-Uniform Memory Access

This part explains a non-uniform memory access (NUMA) architecture may influence the performance of OpenMP programs. It illustrates how to distribute data and bind threads across NUMA domains and how to avoid uncontrolled data or thread migration: find it here.

What is missing? Please let me know which aspects of OpenMP you would like to see covered in one of the next small bites. Just to let you know, some parts on GPU programming with OpenMP are already in preparation and will hopefully be released in the next lecture-free period.

Personal Experience with Online Teaching

Each summer semester, I teach the lecture “Concepts and Models of Parallel and Data-centric Programming” (abbreviated as PDP) at RWTH Aachen University. The lecture mainly attracts students in the Master programs in Computer Science, Data Science, and some Computational Engineering programs. The decision to shift to online teaching was made about two weeks before the start of the lecture period. However, we had about two weeks of additional time for preparations because we anticipated this move. Since we just received the lecture evaluation of this course, I wanted to use this opportunity to write down some thoughts on my personal experience with my first Online Course.

The moment we realized that the summer semester 2020 would not be a “regular” semester, we started discussions about the format that would be best suited for the expected situation. Here, “we” includes the teaching assistants Simon Schwitanski and Julian Miller, who support me and also Matthias Müller, the head of our institute. Back in March, before the start of the lecture period, we quickly realized that it was hard to predict the developments over the coming weeks and months. But much more importantly, we realized that we had little insight into the situations our students are in, in particular of the international students. In consequence, we decided to maximize the flexibility that we wanted to offer to those students who chose to take the summer semester 2020 seriously. Back then, it was not yet decided that it would become a so-called optional semester in Germany.

We decided to offer a format that I would call “Flipped Classroom Style”, because we borrowed many aspects of Flipped Classroom (FP) as described in the literature, but did not fully implement it. Similarly to FP, the lectures were recorded, and students were expected to watch these videos ahead of time. The scheduled class time was used to provide a brief review of the past video lectures, to answer students’ questions, and to explore selected topics in more detail. I consider the following details of our offer to be the most important and a good summary:

  • The lecture was already well-structured into Foundations and nine Chapters. We decided against giving 90 minutes of lectures as videos. Instead, we split the existing material into pieces of 20 to 40 minutes, producing 55 videos in total. The videos were recorded and provided in the Moodle course room. Students could watch them whenever they wanted, wherever they were, and with whatever effort they were capable of investing. The videos were recorded and produced with open source software (OBS, Kdenlive, Audacity).
  • We expected the students to watch approx. 150 minutes of video per week. The content of these videos was covered in the discussion slots (= the scheduled class time) in the following week. Each discussion slot contained an overview of the material that it was intended to cover, giving us the opportunity the emphasize the most important aspects and to express complicated things again in different words. We did these sessions with Zoom.
  • For each chapter, we provided a Quiz, which is an element in Moodle. A quiz mostly consists of simple recall and comprehension questions. Some quizzes ask the students to apply their knowledge to a simple task.
  • We offered the students to execute the exercises bare-metal on the HPC system CLAIX at RWTH Aachen University, or in a Jupyter environment that was developed in parallel in a different activity (see my first report on IkapP). Different from the lectures, we presented the solutions to the exercises “live” (that means: in real-time on the real system) via Zoom. Of course, we had slides with instructions, code solutions, answers to theoretical questions, experiment details, and so forth available. We provided these slides in the Moodle course room after the live presentation. There was no video recorded for any exercise.

One remark on the effort. We had about 200 students signed up for the lecture in RWTH’s student management system, about 100 students in the Moodle course room, and again about 100 students signed up for the final exam. Let us assume that giving two lectures per week is a time investment of 180 minutes (speaking) plus 90 minutes (preparation) plus a bit of walking between the office and the lecture room. With the format outlined above, I would roughly estimate a factor 2 of additional effort because the videos have to be produced in advance, and the scheduled class time still required the lecturer’s presence. The preparation of new content is more or less the same (and was done before Corona happened).

I was really curious about the evaluation of the course. In summary, it was very good. The German grades go from 1.0 (the best) to 5.0 (the worst). Students who on average invested two to four hours per week in course preparation and follow-up work gave us (here: me) the following grades: 1.3 for both the Lecture Concept and the Exercise Course, and 1.4 for both the Lecture and Exercise Instruction and Behavior.

This year, the questionnaire contained a few new questions with a focus on the Digital Teaching aspect. I believe these questions were asked in the wrong manner to get meaningful insight, but they served the case to validate that the students were paying attention when answering the questionnaire. Here is just an excerpt:

  • Q: My enthusiasm to get involved with the contents of the course increased thanks to the digital teaching materials. A: no. My comment: well, I would not have expected any increase.
  • Q: The interaction between students and lecturers is better than with face-to-face teaching. A: no. My comment: In case of yes I would have been disappointed.
  • Q: The interaction between students is better than in face-to-face teaching. A: certainly not. My comment: in case of yes I would have been disappointed.
  • Q: I prefer face-to-face teaching to digital teaching/courses. A: no. My comment: I hope that students develop a preference for Blended Learning.

What did students say in a free-text form about the advantages of digital teaching for this course? Here are just the most common answers, which means they were given by multiple students independently:

  • Better health (more sleep, no Covid)
  • Lectures /exercises can be paused or re-watched
  • Less effort to participate, no travel times to the lecture/exercise
  • Less barrier to ask questions

To be honest, the last point triggered me to think about the lecture and to write this article. Because according to our subjective impression, we received significantly fewer questions in the lecture and the exercise than in previous instances of the course. Why is that? Today, we got a good answer confirmed by three students: students ask fewer questions because videos simplify to reassess the lecture content.

What did students say in a free-text form what they particularly liked about this course? Many of them put answers about digital teaching into this field. Here is a digital teaching-related excerpt, again with a focus on the points that were brought forward by multiple students:

  • High quality of the provided digital materials, very well-defined structure, self-contained and clear explanations for students
  • Concept of video lectures and weekly Q & A sessions
  • Many small videos rather than a few big videos
  • Great summaries and examples
  • Very good and interactive exercises
  • The quizzes
  • The flipped classroom concept went pretty well

The last point is my summary of the digital teaching concept we applied for this lecture and I believe it worked much better than just switching the lecture session to a video broadcast – in particular for our international students. Meanwhile, we learned that a certain portion of them was not able to return to / stay in Germany (we do not have precise numbers, unluckily), which proved our assumption of what would be best for the students true.

For the next instance of this lecture, I would like to improve the videos. While I hope to be able to teach in a classroom again, I believe that proving some videos would be beneficial, given the feedback of the students. For instance, we could provide videos for those aspects that turned out to deliver the least points in the exam. I am currently preparing the transcription of the videos (probably Microsoft Azure Cognitive Services) to make the explanations a bit more cohesive. And we are thinking about how to address the two points of critics that we received:

  • Not uploading exercise videos (students should participate online because they saw the advantage and benefit of doing so. And not because they otherwise miss the presentations and explanations of the teacher. For example, I was one time not able to participate in the exercise lecture because I had got an exam from last semester postponed because of Corona). – I understand that we are not consistent here, but I explained our motivation for the exercise format above. We will think about that.
  • It would have been better if we could actually have a view of our professor moving. It is quite boring to never see him. – Already for the coming winter semester, we are planning for improvement of the video setup that would allow us to record a separate picture of the lecturer. This was not practical in the home-office situation.

Using C++ with OpenMP in jupyter notebooks

Many people might know jupyter notebooks as an interactive, web-based environment for python programming, often in the context of data analysis. However, if the cling kernel is used, it becomes possible to interactively work with C/C++ code. The so-called kernel is the interpreter used for the evaluation of code cells and cling is an interactive C++ interpreter. This could look like this:

C++ in jupyter notebook

In the IkapP project funded by the Stifterverband and state of North Rhine-Westphalia, one goal is to remove entry barriers faced by students using HPC systems in lectures. One step towards this goal is the creation of a virtual lab environment for parallel programming that can also be used for interactive experiments with different parallelization approaches. Users can, e.g., interactively experience performance results of code changes on real HPC systems. There are many parallel programming models in use and of relevance for our lectures, but we wanted to start with OpenMP and MPI. However, cling does not support OpenMP out of the box.

At the time of this writing, the current version of xeus-cling is 0.8.1, which is not based on a recent version of clang. So in principle, OpenMP Version 3.1 should be supported, which means tasking will be available, but offloading will not be available. OpenMP “in action” in a jupyter notebook could look like this:

C++ with OpenMP in jupyter notebook

In order for such notebooks to work correctly, we had to fix a few things in the xeus-cling code, in particular to ensure correct output from multiple threads. The corresponding patches were created and submitted by Jonas Hahnfeld, a student worker in the IkapP project at RWTH. They have been accepted to mainline (#314, #315, #320, #332, #319, #316, #324, #325 (also submitted to xeus-python) and #329), but since our submission there has been no new release.

Compiling and Installing xeus-cling on CentOS 7.7

The production environment on RWTH’s HPC systems is CentOS 7.7. The build instructions were compiled by Jonas. In order to build xeus-clang for a jupyter environment, do for each of the following projects (in this order):

https://github.com/jarro2783/cxxopts, https://github.com/nlohmann/json, https://github.com/zeux/pugixml, https://github.com/xtensor-stack/xtl, https://github.com/zeromq/libzmq, https://github.com/zeromq/cppzmq, https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus, https://github.com/jupyter-xeus/xeus-cling

$ git clone https://github.com/org/repo src
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/to/install/xeus-cling/ \
-DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=/path/to/install/xeus-cling/bin/clang \
-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/path/to/install/xeus-cling/bin/clang++ \  ../src
$ make -j32
$ make install

After that, activate the kernels via

for k in xcpp11 xcpp14 xcpp17; do
cp -r ../../../../xeus-cling/share/jupyter/kernels/$k /path/to/install/jupyter/share/jupyter/kernels/;
done

and add -fopenmp to each kernel.json to enable OpenMP. Finally, let cling find the runtime libraries by adding to jupyterhub_config.py:

c.Spawner.environment = {
  'LD_LIBRARY_PATH': '/path/to/install/xeus-cling/lib/',
}