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Caliper: Context Annotation Library (for Performance)

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Caliper is a program instrumentation and performance measurement framework. It provides data collection mechanisms and a source-code annotation API for a variety of performance engineering use cases, e.g., performance profiling, tracing, monitoring, and auto-tuning. Features include:

  • Low-overhead source-code annotation API for C, C++ and Fortran
  • Flexible key:value data model: capture application-specific features for performance analysis
  • Fully threadsafe implementation, support for parallel programming models
  • Synchronous and asynchronous data collection (sampling)
  • Runtime-configurable performance data recording toolbox: combine independent building blocks for custom analysis tasks

Released under a BSD license, LLNL-CODE-678900. See LICENSE file for details.

Documentation

Extensive documentation is available here: https://llnl.github.io/Caliper/

Usage examples of the C++ and C annotation interfaces are provided in test/cali-basic.cpp and test/cali-basic-c.c, respectively.

See the "Getting started" section below for a brief tutorial.

Building and installing

Building and installing Caliper requires cmake and a current C++11-compatible Compiler. Unpack the source distribution and proceed as follows:

 cd <path to caliper root directory>
 mkdir build && cd build
 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=<path to install location> \ 
     -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=<path to c-compiler> \
     -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=<path to c++-compiler> \
     ..
 make 
 make install

See the "Build and install" section in the documentation for further information.

Getting started

Caliper provides annotation APIs for marking source-code regions or exporting arbitrary data in the form of key:value attributes.

Caliper can then be configured to take "snapshots" of the provided data at specified events. Optionally, measurement data, e.g. timestamps, can be added to the snapshots. Source-code annotations, measurement data providers, and snapshot configurations can be flexibly combined to support a wide range of performance analysis or monitoring use cases.

Build and link annotated programs

To use Caliper, add annotation statements to your program and link it against the Caliper library. Programs must be linked with the Caliper runtime (libcaliper.so).

CALIPER_LIBS = -L$(CALIPER_DIR)/lib64 -lcaliper

Source-code annotation

Caliper provides source-code annotation APIs for C, C++, and Fortran.

The following example marks "initialization" and "mainloop" phases in a C++ code, and exports the main loop's current iteration counter.

#include <caliper/cali.h>

int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    // Mark this function
    CALI_CXX_MARK_FUNCTION;

    // Mark the "intialization" phase
    CALI_MARK_BEGIN("initialization");
    // perform initialization tasks
    int count = 4;
    double t = 0.0, delta_t = 1e-6;
    CALI_MARK_END("initialization");

    // Mark the loop 
    CALI_CXX_MARK_LOOP_BEGIN(mainloop, "mainloop");
        
    for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i) {
        // Mark each loop iteration  
        CALI_CXX_MARK_LOOP_ITERATION(mainloop, i);

        // A Caliper snapshot taken at this point will contain
        // { "function" : "main"
        //   "loop"     : "mainloop"
        //   "iteration#mainloop" : <i> }

        // perform computation
        t += delta_t;
    }

    CALI_CXX_MARK_LOOP_END(mainloop);
}

Run the program

Caliper will now be able to take and process snapshots or access the information provided by the source-code annotations at runtime. The source-code annotations also provide hooks to enable various runtime actions, such as triggering snapshots or writing traces.

By default, the annotation commands perform no actions other than updating the blackboard. However, we can connect a Caliper-enabled third-party tool to the program, or enable built-in Caliper "service" modules to take measurements and collect data.

As an example, Caliper's built-in trace configuration profiles trigger and write snapshots whenever any or specific attributes are updated, generating a snapshot trace. A configuration profile can be selected with the CALI_CONFIG_PROFILE environment variable:

$ CALI_CONFIG_PROFILE=serial-trace ./cali-basic
== CALIPER: Registered event service
== CALIPER: Registered recorder service
== CALIPER: Registered timestamp service
== CALIPER: Registered trace service
== CALIPER: Initialized
== CALIPER: Wrote 36 records.
== CALIPER: Finished

With this configuration, Caliper will write a take a snapshot for each attribute update performed by the annotation commands, calculate the time spent in each of the annotated phases, and write the results in form of a snapshot trace to a .cali file in the current working directory.

Analyze Data

Use the cali-query tool to filter, aggregate, or print the recorded snapshots. For example, we can use it to print the time spent in each timed region in a table:

$ ls *.cali
160219-095419_5623_LQfNQTNgpqdM.cali
$ cali-query -s time.inclusive.duration --table \
      160219-095419_5623_LQfNQTNgpqdM.cali
function phase          loop      iter..loop time.inc..ation
main     initialization                                  100
main                    mainloop           0              23
main                    mainloop           1               9
main                    mainloop           2               6
main                    mainloop           3               8
main                    mainloop                          78
main                                                     258

Where to go from here?

Caliper allows a great amount of flexibility and control in utilizing source-code annotations. The "Usage examples" section in the documentation demonstrates some of the many ways to use Caliper. Much of Caliper's functionality is implemented by built-in "services", which can be enabled or disabled as needed. Refer to the "Caliper services" section to learn about functionality they provide. Finally, the "Annotation API" section in the documentation provides reference documentation for Caliper's C, C++, and Fortran annotation APIs.