GhostSZ: A Transparent FPGA-Accelerated Lossy Compression Framework

2019 
High-performance computing (HPC) applications often generate enormous amounts of data that must be transferred for check-pointing, in situ processing, or post-execution analysis. To reduce the related network traffic and storage consumption, lossy compression schemes that target scientific data are often used. SZ compression emerged three years ago and has gained much attention because of its high compression ratio. However, performing SZ compression can take half a day per Terabyte of data; this could be a drawback to adoption. We propose GhostSZ an FPGA framework for accelerating tasks in SZ at line rate, and so transparently. The critical problem to be overcome is the tight data dependence central to SZ. GhostSZ solves this with a data transfer path having novel staged hardware. We test our implementation with both synthetic and real HPC application data and show 9.5×-80× core versus pipeline speedup over the optimized production version running on a state-of-the-art CPU and 8.2× per chip. Much of the variance in performance is due to the FPGA already running at line rate and so benefiting less from optimizations applicable to the CPU only on the most favorable data sets. The significance of this work is the possibility of a major reduction in required networking and storage in HPC installations. For example, using GhostSZ, fewer than 10 FPGAs would be sufficient to handle the entire I/O bandwidth of the top entry on the latest IO-500 list.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    29
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []