forked from lijiext/lammps
250 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
250 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
:doc:`Return to Section accelerate overview <Section_accelerate>`
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5.GPU package
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-------------
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The GPU package was developed by Mike Brown at ORNL and his
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collaborators, particularly Trung Nguyen (ORNL). It provides GPU
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versions of many pair styles, including the 3-body Stillinger-Weber
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pair style, and for :doc:`kspace_style pppm <kspace_style>` for
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long-range Coulombics. It has the following general features:
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* It is designed to exploit common GPU hardware configurations where one
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or more GPUs are coupled to many cores of one or more multi-core CPUs,
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e.g. within a node of a parallel machine.
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* Atom-based data (e.g. coordinates, forces) moves back-and-forth
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between the CPU(s) and GPU every timestep.
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* Neighbor lists can be built on the CPU or on the GPU
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* The charge assignement and force interpolation portions of PPPM can be
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run on the GPU. The FFT portion, which requires MPI communication
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between processors, runs on the CPU.
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* Asynchronous force computations can be performed simultaneously on the
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CPU(s) and GPU.
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* It allows for GPU computations to be performed in single or double
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precision, or in mixed-mode precision, where pairwise forces are
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computed in single precision, but accumulated into double-precision
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force vectors.
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* LAMMPS-specific code is in the GPU package. It makes calls to a
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generic GPU library in the lib/gpu directory. This library provides
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NVIDIA support as well as more general OpenCL support, so that the
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same functionality can eventually be supported on a variety of GPU
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hardware.
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Here is a quick overview of how to use the GPU package:
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* build the library in lib/gpu for your GPU hardware wity desired precision
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* include the GPU package and build LAMMPS
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* use the mpirun command to set the number of MPI tasks/node which determines the number of MPI tasks/GPU
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* specify the # of GPUs per node
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* use GPU styles in your input script
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The latter two steps can be done using the "-pk gpu" and "-sf gpu"
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:ref:`command-line switches <start_7>` respectively. Or
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the effect of the "-pk" or "-sf" switches can be duplicated by adding
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the :doc:`package gpu <package>` or :doc:`suffix gpu <suffix>` commands
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respectively to your input script.
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**Required hardware/software:**
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To use this package, you currently need to have an NVIDIA GPU and
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install the NVIDIA Cuda software on your system:
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* Check if you have an NVIDIA GPU: cat /proc/driver/nvidia/gpus/0/information
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* Go to http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_get.html
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* Install a driver and toolkit appropriate for your system (SDK is not necessary)
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* Run lammps/lib/gpu/nvc_get_devices (after building the GPU library, see below) to list supported devices and properties
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**Building LAMMPS with the GPU package:**
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This requires two steps (a,b): build the GPU library, then build
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LAMMPS with the GPU package.
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You can do both these steps in one line, using the src/Make.py script,
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described in :ref:`Section 2.4 <start_4>` of the manual.
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Type "Make.py -h" for help. If run from the src directory, this
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command will create src/lmp_gpu using src/MAKE/Makefile.mpi as the
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starting Makefile.machine:
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.. parsed-literal::
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Make.py -p gpu -gpu mode=single arch=31 -o gpu -a lib-gpu file mpi
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Or you can follow these two (a,b) steps:
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(a) Build the GPU library
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The GPU library is in lammps/lib/gpu. Select a Makefile.machine (in
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lib/gpu) appropriate for your system. You should pay special
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attention to 3 settings in this makefile.
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* CUDA_HOME = needs to be where NVIDIA Cuda software is installed on your system
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* CUDA_ARCH = needs to be appropriate to your GPUs
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* CUDA_PREC = precision (double, mixed, single) you desire
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See lib/gpu/Makefile.linux.double for examples of the ARCH settings
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for different GPU choices, e.g. Fermi vs Kepler. It also lists the
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possible precision settings:
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.. parsed-literal::
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CUDA_PREC = -D_SINGLE_SINGLE # single precision for all calculations
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CUDA_PREC = -D_DOUBLE_DOUBLE # double precision for all calculations
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CUDA_PREC = -D_SINGLE_DOUBLE # accumulation of forces, etc, in double
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The last setting is the mixed mode referred to above. Note that your
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GPU must support double precision to use either the 2nd or 3rd of
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these settings.
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To build the library, type:
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.. parsed-literal::
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make -f Makefile.machine
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If successful, it will produce the files libgpu.a and Makefile.lammps.
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The latter file has 3 settings that need to be appropriate for the
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paths and settings for the CUDA system software on your machine.
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Makefile.lammps is a copy of the file specified by the EXTRAMAKE
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setting in Makefile.machine. You can change EXTRAMAKE or create your
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own Makefile.lammps.machine if needed.
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Note that to change the precision of the GPU library, you need to
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re-build the entire library. Do a "clean" first, e.g. "make -f
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Makefile.linux clean", followed by the make command above.
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(b) Build LAMMPS with the GPU package
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.. parsed-literal::
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cd lammps/src
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make yes-gpu
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make machine
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No additional compile/link flags are needed in Makefile.machine.
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Note that if you change the GPU library precision (discussed above)
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and rebuild the GPU library, then you also need to re-install the GPU
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package and re-build LAMMPS, so that all affected files are
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re-compiled and linked to the new GPU library.
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**Run with the GPU package from the command line:**
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The mpirun or mpiexec command sets the total number of MPI tasks used
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by LAMMPS (one or multiple per compute node) and the number of MPI
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tasks used per node. E.g. the mpirun command in MPICH does this via
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its -np and -ppn switches. Ditto for OpenMPI via -np and -npernode.
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When using the GPU package, you cannot assign more than one GPU to a
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single MPI task. However multiple MPI tasks can share the same GPU,
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and in many cases it will be more efficient to run this way. Likewise
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it may be more efficient to use less MPI tasks/node than the available
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# of CPU cores. Assignment of multiple MPI tasks to a GPU will happen
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automatically if you create more MPI tasks/node than there are
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GPUs/mode. E.g. with 8 MPI tasks/node and 2 GPUs, each GPU will be
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shared by 4 MPI tasks.
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Use the "-sf gpu" :ref:`command-line switch <start_7>`,
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which will automatically append "gpu" to styles that support it. Use
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the "-pk gpu Ng" :ref:`command-line switch <start_7>` to
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set Ng = # of GPUs/node to use.
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.. parsed-literal::
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lmp_machine -sf gpu -pk gpu 1 -in in.script # 1 MPI task uses 1 GPU
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mpirun -np 12 lmp_machine -sf gpu -pk gpu 2 -in in.script # 12 MPI tasks share 2 GPUs on a single 16-core (or whatever) node
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mpirun -np 48 -ppn 12 lmp_machine -sf gpu -pk gpu 2 -in in.script # ditto on 4 16-core nodes
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Note that if the "-sf gpu" switch is used, it also issues a default
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:doc:`package gpu 1 <package>` command, which sets the number of
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GPUs/node to 1.
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Using the "-pk" switch explicitly allows for setting of the number of
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GPUs/node to use and additional options. Its syntax is the same as
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same as the "package gpu" command. See the :doc:`package <package>`
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command doc page for details, including the default values used for
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all its options if it is not specified.
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Note that the default for the :doc:`package gpu <package>` command is to
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set the Newton flag to "off" pairwise interactions. It does not
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affect the setting for bonded interactions (LAMMPS default is "on").
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The "off" setting for pairwise interaction is currently required for
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GPU package pair styles.
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**Or run with the GPU package by editing an input script:**
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The discussion above for the mpirun/mpiexec command, MPI tasks/node,
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and use of multiple MPI tasks/GPU is the same.
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Use the :doc:`suffix gpu <suffix>` command, or you can explicitly add an
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"gpu" suffix to individual styles in your input script, e.g.
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.. parsed-literal::
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pair_style lj/cut/gpu 2.5
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You must also use the :doc:`package gpu <package>` command to enable the
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GPU package, unless the "-sf gpu" or "-pk gpu" :ref:`command-line switches <start_7>` were used. It specifies the
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number of GPUs/node to use, as well as other options.
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**Speed-ups to expect:**
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The performance of a GPU versus a multi-core CPU is a function of your
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hardware, which pair style is used, the number of atoms/GPU, and the
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precision used on the GPU (double, single, mixed).
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See the `Benchmark page <http://lammps.sandia.gov/bench.html>`_ of the
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LAMMPS web site for performance of the GPU package on various
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hardware, including the Titan HPC platform at ORNL.
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You should also experiment with how many MPI tasks per GPU to use to
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give the best performance for your problem and machine. This is also
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a function of the problem size and the pair style being using.
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Likewise, you should experiment with the precision setting for the GPU
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library to see if single or mixed precision will give accurate
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results, since they will typically be faster.
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**Guidelines for best performance:**
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* Using multiple MPI tasks per GPU will often give the best performance,
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as allowed my most multi-core CPU/GPU configurations.
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* If the number of particles per MPI task is small (e.g. 100s of
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particles), it can be more efficient to run with fewer MPI tasks per
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GPU, even if you do not use all the cores on the compute node.
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* The :doc:`package gpu <package>` command has several options for tuning
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performance. Neighbor lists can be built on the GPU or CPU. Force
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calculations can be dynamically balanced across the CPU cores and
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GPUs. GPU-specific settings can be made which can be optimized
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for different hardware. See the :doc:`packakge <package>` command
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doc page for details.
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* As described by the :doc:`package gpu <package>` command, GPU
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accelerated pair styles can perform computations asynchronously with
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CPU computations. The "Pair" time reported by LAMMPS will be the
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maximum of the time required to complete the CPU pair style
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computations and the time required to complete the GPU pair style
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computations. Any time spent for GPU-enabled pair styles for
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computations that run simultaneously with :doc:`bond <bond_style>`,
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:doc:`angle <angle_style>`, :doc:`dihedral <dihedral_style>`,
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:doc:`improper <improper_style>`, and :doc:`long-range <kspace_style>`
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calculations will not be included in the "Pair" time.
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* When the *mode* setting for the package gpu command is force/neigh,
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the time for neighbor list calculations on the GPU will be added into
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the "Pair" time, not the "Neigh" time. An additional breakdown of the
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times required for various tasks on the GPU (data copy, neighbor
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calculations, force computations, etc) are output only with the LAMMPS
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screen output (not in the log file) at the end of each run. These
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timings represent total time spent on the GPU for each routine,
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regardless of asynchronous CPU calculations.
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* The output section "GPU Time Info (average)" reports "Max Mem / Proc".
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This is the maximum memory used at one time on the GPU for data
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storage by a single MPI process.
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Restrictions
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""""""""""""
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None.
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.. _lws: http://lammps.sandia.gov
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.. _ld: Manual.html
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.. _lc: Section_commands.html#comm
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