NAMD 2.10 Release Notes
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| NAMD 2.10 Release Notes |
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This file contains the following sections:
- Problems? Found a bug?
- Installing NAMD
- Running NAMD
- CPU Affinity
- CUDA GPU Acceleration
- Xeon Phi Acceleration
- Compiling NAMD
- Memory Usage
- Improving Parallel Scaling
- Endian Issues
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Problems? Found a bug?
1. Download and test the latest version of NAMD.
2. Please check NamdWiki, NAMD-L, and the rest of the NAMD web site
resources at http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/.
3. For problems compiling or running NAMD please review the release
notes, Charm++ Installation and Usage Manual, and NamdOn... pages
at NamdWiki. If you do not understand the errors generated by your
compiler, queueing system, ssh, or mpiexec you should seek assistance
from a local expert familiar with your setup.
4. For questions about using NAMD please subscribe to NAMD-L and post
your question there so that others may benefit from the discussion.
Please avoid sending attachments to NAMD-L by posting any related
files on your web site and including the location in your message.
If you are not familiar with molecular dynamics simulations please
work through the tutorials and seek assistance from a local expert.
5. Gather, in a single directory, all input and config files needed
to reproduce your problem.
6. Run once, redirecting output to a file (if the problem occurs
randomly do a short run and include additional log files showing
the error).
5. Tar everything up (but not the namd2 or charmrun binaries) and
compress it, e.g., "tar cf mydir.tar mydir; gzip mydir.tar"
Please do not attach your files individually to your email message
as this is error prone and tedious to extract. The only exception
may be the log of your run showing any error messages.
6. For problems concerning compiling or using NAMD please consider
subscribing to NAMD-L and posting your question there, and
summarizing the resolution of your problem on NamdWiki so that
others may benefit from your experience. Please avoid sending large
attachments to NAMD-L by posting any related files on your web site
or on BioCoRE (http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/BioCoRE/, in BioFS for
the NAMD public project) and including the location in your message.
7. For bug reports, mail namd@ks.uiuc.edu with:
- A synopsis of the problem as the subject (not "HELP" or "URGENT").
- The NAMD version, platform and number of CPUs the problem occurs
(to be very complete just copy the first 20 lines of output).
- A description of the problematic behavior and any error messages.
- If the problem is consistent or random.
- A complete log of your run showing any error messages.
- The URL of your compressed tar file on a web server.
8. We'll get back to you with further questions or suggestions. While
we try to treat all of our users equally and respond to emails in a
timely manner, other demands occasionally prevent us from doing so.
Please understand that we must give our highest priority to crashes
or incorrect results from the most recently released NAMD binaries.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Installing NAMD
A NAMD binary distribution need only be untarred or unzipped and can
be run directly in the resulting directory. When building from source
code (see "Compiling NAMD" below), "make release" will generate a
self-contained directory and .tar.gz or .zip archive that can be moved
to the desired installation location. Windows and CUDA builds include
Tcl .dll and CUDA .so files that must be in the dynamic library path.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Running NAMD
NAMD runs on a variety of serial and parallel platforms. While it is
trivial to launch a serial program, a parallel program depends on a
platform-specific library such as MPI to launch copies of itself on other
nodes and to provide access to a high performance network such as Myrinet
or InfiniBand if one is available.
For typical workstations (Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, or other Unix) with
only ethernet networking (hopefully gigabit), NAMD uses the Charm++ native
communications layer and the program charmrun to launch namd2 processes
for parallel runs (either exclusively on the local machine with the
++local option or on other hosts as specified by a nodelist file). The
namd2 binaries for these platforms can also be run directly (known as
standalone mode) for single process runs.
-- Individual Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, or Other Unix Workstations --
Individual workstations use the same version of NAMD as workstation
networks, but running NAMD is much easier. If your machine has only one
processor core you can run the namd2 binary directly:
namd2 <configfile>
Windows, Mac OX X (Intel), and Linux-x86_64-multicore released binaries
are based on "multicore" builds of Charm++ that can run multiple threads.
These multicore builds lack a network layer, so they can only be used on
a single machine. For best performance use one thread per processor
with the +p option:
namd2 +p<procs> <configfile>
For other multiprocessor workstations the included charmrun program is
needed to run multiple namd2 processes. The ++local option is also
required to specify that only the local machine is being used:
charmrun namd2 ++local +p<procs> <configfile>
You may need to specify the full path to the namd2 binary.
-- Windows Clusters and Workstation Networks ---
The Win64-MPI version of NAMD runs on Windows HPC Server and should be
launched as you would any other MPI program.
-- Linux Clusters with InfiniBand or Other High-Performance Networks --
Charm++ provides a special ibverbs network layer that uses InfiniBand
networks directly through the OpenFabrics OFED ibverbs library. This
avoids efficiency and portability issues associated with MPI. Look for
pre-built ibverbs NAMD binaries or specify ibverbs when building Charm++.
Writing batch job scripts to run charmrun in a queueing system can be
challenging. Since most clusters provide directions for using mpiexec
to launch MPI jobs, charmrun provides a ++mpiexec option to use mpiexec
to launch non-MPI binaries. If "mpiexec -np <procs> ..." is not
sufficient to launch jobs on your cluster you will need to write an
executable mympiexec script like the following from TACC:
#!/bin/csh
shift; shift; exec ibrun $*
The job is then launched (with full paths where needed) as:
charmrun +p<procs> ++mpiexec ++remote-shell mympiexec namd2 <configfile>
For workstation clusters and other massively parallel machines with
special high-performance networking, NAMD uses the system-provided MPI
library (with a few exceptions) and standard system tools such as mpirun
are used to launch jobs. Since MPI libraries are very often incompatible
between versions, you will likely need to recompile NAMD and its
underlying Charm++ libraries to use these machines in parallel (the
provided non-MPI binaries should still work for serial runs.) The provided
charmrun program for these platforms is only a script that attempts to
translate charmrun options into mpirun options, but due to the diversity
of MPI libraries it often fails to work.
-- Linux or Other Unix Workstation Networks --
The same binaries used for individual workstations as described above
(other than pure "multicore" builds and MPI builds) can be used with
charmrun to run in parallel on a workstation network. The only difference
is that you must provide a "nodelist" file listing the machines where
namd2 processes should run, for example:
group main
host brutus
host romeo
The "group main" line defines the default machine list. Hosts brutus and
romeo are the two machines on which to run the simulation. Note that
charmrun may run on one of those machines, or charmrun may run on a third
machine. All machines used for a simulation must be of the same type and
have access to the same namd2 binary.
By default, the "rsh" command ("remsh" on HPUX) is used to start namd2 on
each node specified in the nodelist file. You can change this via the
CONV_RSH environment variable, i.e., to use ssh instead of rsh run "setenv
CONV_RSH ssh" or add it to your login or batch script. You must be able
to connect to each node via rsh/ssh without typing your password; this can
be accomplished via a .rhosts files in your home directory, by an
/etc/hosts.equiv file installed by your sysadmin, or by a
.ssh/authorized_keys file in your home directory. You should confirm that
you can run "ssh hostname pwd" (or "rsh hostname pwd") without typing a
password before running NAMD. Contact your local sysadmin if you have
difficulty setting this up. If you are unable to use rsh or ssh, then add
"setenv CONV_DAEMON" to your script and run charmd (or charmd_faceless,
which produces a log file) on every node.
You should now be able to try running NAMD as:
charmrun namd2 +p<procs> <configfile>
If this fails or just hangs, try adding the ++verbose option to see more
details of the startup process. You may need to specify the full path to
the namd2 binary. Charmrun will start the number of processes specified
by the +p option, cycling through the hosts in the nodelist file as many
times as necessary. You may list multiprocessor machines multiple times
in the nodelist file, once for each processor.
You may specify the nodelist file with the "++nodelist" option and the
group (which defaults to "main") with the "++nodegroup" option. If you do
not use "++nodelist" charmrun will first look for "nodelist" in your
current directory and then ".nodelist" in your home directory.
Some automounters use a temporary mount directory which is prepended to
the path returned by the pwd command. To run on multiple machines you
must add a "++pathfix" option to your nodelist file. For example:
group main ++pathfix /tmp_mnt /
host alpha1
host alpha2
There are many other options to charmrun and for the nodelist file. These
are documented at in the Charm++ Installation and Usage Manual available
at http://charm.cs.uiuc.edu/manuals/ and a list of available charmrun
options is available by running charmrun without arguments.
If your workstation cluster is controlled by a queueing system you will
need build a nodelist file in your job script. For example, if your
queueing system provides a $HOST_FILE environment variable:
set NODES = `cat $HOST_FILE`
set NODELIST = $TMPDIR/namd2.nodelist
echo group main >! $NODELIST
foreach node ( $nodes )
echo host $node >> $NODELIST
end
@ NUMPROCS = 2 * $#NODES
charmrun namd2 +p$NUMPROCS ++nodelist $NODELIST <configfile>
Note that $NUMPROCS is twice the number of nodes in this example. This is
the case for dual-processor machines. For single-processor machines you
would not multiply $#NODES by two.
Note that these example scripts and the setenv command are for the csh or
tcsh shells. They must be translated to work with sh or bash.
-- Shared-Memory and Network-Based Parallelism (SMP Builds) --
The Linux-x86_64-ibverbs-smp and Solaris-x86_64-smp released binaries are
based on "smp" builds of Charm++ that can be used with multiple threads
on either a single machine like a multicore build, or across a network.
SMP builds combine multiple worker threads and an extra communication
thread into a single process. Since one core per process is used for
the communication thread SMP builds are typically slower than non-SMP
builds. The advantage of SMP builds is that many data structures are
shared among the threads, reducing the per-core memory footprint when
scaling large simulations to large numbers of cores.
SMP builds launched with charmrun use +p to specify the total number of
PEs (worker threads) and +ppn to specify the number of PEs per process.
Thus, to run one process with one communication and three worker threads
on each of four quad-core nodes one would specify:
charmrun namd2 +p12 +ppn 3 <configfile>
For MPI-based SMP builds one would specify any mpiexec options needed
for the required number of processes and pass +ppn to the NAMD binary as:
mpiexec -np 4 namd2 +ppn 3 <configfile>
See the Cray XE/XK/XC directions below for a more complex example.
-- Cray XE/XK/XC --
First load modules for the GNU compilers (XE/XK only, XC30 should use Intel),
topology information, huge page sizes, and the system FFTW 3 library:
module swap PrgEnv-cray PrgEnv-gnu
module load rca
module load craype-hugepages8M
module load fftw
The CUDA Toolkit module enables dynamic linking, so it should only
be loaded when building CUDA binaries and never for non-CUDA binaries:
module load cudatoolkit
For CUDA or large simulations on XE/XK use gemini_gni-crayxe-persistent-smp
and for smaller XE simulations use gemini_gni-crayxe-persistent. For XC30
the persistent feature is broken so use gni-crayxc-smp or gni-crayxc.
For XE/XK use CRAY-XE-gnu and (for CUDA) the ``--with-cuda'' config option,
the appropriate ``--charm-arch'' parameter, and --with-fftw3. For XC30
use instead CRAY-XC-intel but all other options the same.
Your batch job will need to load modules and set environment variables:
module swap PrgEnv-cray PrgEnv-gnu
module load rca
module load craype-hugepages8M
setenv HUGETLB_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE 8M
setenv HUGETLB_MORECORE no
To run an SMP build with one process per node on 16 32-core nodes:
aprun -n 16 -r 1 -N 1 -d 31 /path/to/namd2 +ppn 30 +pemap 1-30 +commap 0 <configfile>
or the same with 4 processes per node:
aprun -n 64 -N 4 -d 8 /path/to/namd2 +ppn 7 +pemap 1-7,9-15,17-23,25-31 +commap 0,8,16,24 <configfile>
or non-SMP, leaving one core free for the operating system:
aprun -n 496 -r 1 -N 31 -d 1 /path/to/namd2 +pemap 0-30 <configfile>
The explicit +pemap and +commap settings are necessary to avoid having
multiple threads assigned to the same core (or potentially all threads
assigned to the same core). If the performance of NAMD running on a
single compute node is much worse than comparable non-Cray host then
it is very likely that your CPU affinity settings need to be fixed.
-- SGI Altix UV --
Use Linux-x86_64-multicore and the following script to set CPU affinity:
namd2 +setcpuaffinity `numactl --show | awk '/^physcpubind/ {printf \
"+p%d +pemap %d",(NF-1),$2; for(i=3;i<=NF;++i){printf ",%d",$i}}'` ...
For runs on large numbers of cores (you will need to experiment) use the
following to enable the Charm++ communication thread:
namd2 +setcpuaffinity `numactl --show | awk '/^physcpubind/ {printf \
"+p%d +pemap %d",(NF-2),$2; for(i=3;i<NF;++i){printf ",%d",$i}; \
print " +commthread +commap",$NF}'`
-- IBM POWER Clusters --
Run the MPI version of NAMD as you would any POE program. The options and
environment variables for poe are various and arcane, so you should
consult your local documentation for recommended settings. As an example,
to run on Blue Horizon one would specify:
poe namd2 <configfile> -nodes <procs/8> -tasks_per_node 8
----------------------------------------------------------------------
CPU Affinity
NAMD may run faster on some machines if threads or processes are set to
run on (or not run on) specific processor cores (or hardware threads).
On Linux this can be done at the process level with the numactl utility,
but NAMD provides its own options for assigning threads to cores. This
feature is enabled by adding +setcpuaffinity to the namd2 command line,
which by itself will cause NAMD (really the underlying Charm++ library)
to assign threads/processes round-robin to available cores in the order
they are numbered by the operating system. This may not be the fastest
configuration if NAMD is running fewer threads than there are cores
available and consecutively numbered cores share resources such as
memory bandwidth or are hardware threads on the same physical core.
If needed, specific cores for the Charm++ PEs (processing elements) and
communication threads (on all SMP builds and on multicore builds when
the +commthread option is specified) can be set by adding the +pemap
and (if needed) +commap options with lists of core sets in the form
"lower[-upper[:stride[.run]]][,...]". A single number identifies a
particular core. Two numbers separated by a dash identify an inclusive
range (lower bound and upper bound). If they are followed by a colon and
another number (a stride), that range will be stepped through in increments
of the additional number. Within each stride, a dot followed by a run will
indicate how many cores to use from that starting point. For example, the
sequence 0-8:2,16,20-24 includes cores 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24.
On a 4-way quad-core system three cores from each socket would be 0-15:4.3
if cores on the same chip are numbered consecutively. There is no need
to repeat cores for each node in a run as they are reused in order.
For example, the IBM POWER7 has four hardware threads per core and the
first thread can use all of the core's resources if the other threads are
idle; threads 0 and 1 split the core if threads 2 and 3 are idle, but
if either of threads 2 or 3 are active the core is split four ways. The
fastest configuration of 32 threads or processes on a 128-thread 32-core
is therefore "+setcpuaffinity +pemap 0-127:4". For 64 threads we need
cores 0,1,4,5,8,9,... or 0-127:4.2. Running 4 processes with +ppn 31
would be "+setcpuaffinity +pemap 0-127:32.31 +commap 31-127:32"
For an Altix UV or other machines where the queueing system assigns cores
to jobs this information must be obtained with numactl --show and passed
to NAMD in order to set thread affinity (which will improve performance):
namd2 +setcpuaffinity `numactl --show | awk '/^physcpubind/ {printf \
"+p%d +pemap %d",(NF-1),$2; for(i=3;i<=NF;++i){printf ",%d",$i}}'` ...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
CUDA GPU Acceleration
Energy evaluation is slower than calculating forces alone, and the loss
is much greater in CUDA-accelerated builds. Therefore you should set
outputEnergies to 100 or higher in the simulation config file. Some
features are unavailable in CUDA builds, including alchemical free
energy perturbation and the Lowe-Andersen thermostat.
As this is a new feature you are encouraged to test all simulations
before beginning production runs. Forces evaluated on the GPU differ
slightly from a CPU-only calculation, an effect more visible in reported
scalar pressure values than in energies.
To benefit from GPU acceleration you will need a CUDA build of NAMD
and a recent high-end NVIDIA video card. CUDA builds will not function
without a CUDA-capable GPU and a driver that supports CUDA 6.0. If the
installed driver is too old NAMD will exit on startup with the error
"CUDA driver version is insufficient for CUDA runtime version".
Finally, if NAMD was not statically linked against the CUDA runtime
then the libcudart.so file included with the binary (copied from
the version of CUDA it was built with) must be in a directory in your
LD_LIBRARY_PATH before any other libcudart.so libraries. For example,
when running a multicore binary (recommended for a single machine):
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH ".:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
(or LD_LIBRARY_PATH=".:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"; export LD_LIBRARY_PATH)
./namd2 +p4 <configfile>
Each namd2 thread can use only one GPU. Therefore you will need to run
at least one thread for each GPU you want to use. Multiple threads
can share a single GPU, usually with an increase in performance. NAMD
will automatically distribute threads equally among the GPUs on a node.
Specific GPU device IDs can be requested via the +devices argument on
the namd2 command line, for example:
./namd2 +p4 +devices 0,2 <configfile>
Devices are shared by consecutive threads in a process, so in the above
example processes 0 and 1 will share device 0 and processes 2 and 3 will
share device 2. Repeating a device will cause it to be assigned to
multiple master threads, either in the same or different processes, which
is advised against in general but may be faster in certain cases. In the
above example one could specify +devices 0,2,0,2 to cause device 0 to be
shared by threads 0 and 2, etc. When running on multiple nodes the
+devices specification is applied to each physical node separately and
there is no way to provide a unique list for each node.
GPUs of compute capability 1.0 are no longer supported and are ignored.
GPUs with two or fewer multiprocessors are ignored unless specifically
requested with +devices.
While charmrun with ++local will preserve LD_LIBRARY_PATH, normal
charmrun does not. You can use charmrun ++runscript to add the namd2
directory to LD_LIBRARY_PATH with the following executable runscript:
#!/bin/csh
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH "${1:h}:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH"
$*
For example:
./charmrun ++runscript ./runscript +p24 ./namd2 +ppn 3 <configfile>
An InfiniBand network is highly recommended when running CUDA-accelerated
NAMD across multiple nodes. You will need either an ibverbs NAMD binary
(available for download) or an MPI NAMD binary (must build Charm++ and
NAMD as described below) to make use of the InfiniBand network. The use
of SMP binaries is also recommended when running on multiple nodes, with
one process per GPU and as many threads as available cores, reserving
one core per process for the communication thread.
The CUDA (NVIDIA's graphics processor programming platform) code in
NAMD is completely self-contained and does not use any of the CUDA
support features in Charm++. When building NAMD with CUDA support
you should use the same Charm++ you would use for a non-CUDA build.
Do NOT add the cuda option to the Charm++ build command line. The
only changes to the build process needed are to add --with-cuda and
possibly --cuda-prefix ... to the NAMD config command line.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Xeon Phi Acceleration
NAMD supports offloading calculations to Intel Xeon Phi coprocessors.
This feature is new and should be considered experimental. Observed
speedups are around a factor of two, but parallel scaling is degraded.
The Xeon Phi coprocessor is supported in NAMD similar to CUDA GPUs.
Binaries are not provided, so you will need to build from source code
(see "Compiling NAMD" below) specifying --with-mic to the config script.
As with CUDA, multicore or ibverbs-smp builds are strongly recommended.
A recent Intel compiler is obviously required to compile for Xeon Phi.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Compiling NAMD
Building a complete NAMD binary from source code requires working
C and C++ compilers, Charm++/Converse, TCL, and FFTW. NAMD will
compile without TCL or FFTW but certain features will be disabled.
Fortunately, precompiled libraries are available from
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/libraries/. You may disable
these options by specifying --without-tcl --without-fftw as options
when you run the config script. Some files in arch may need editing
to set the path to TCL and FFTW libraries correctly.
As an example, here is the build sequence for 64-bit Linux workstations:
Unpack NAMD and matching Charm++ source code:
tar xzf NAMD_2.10_Source.tar.gz
cd NAMD_2.10_Source
tar xf charm-6.6.1.tar
Build and test the Charm++/Converse library (multicore version):
cd charm-6.6.1
./build charm++ multicore-linux64 --with-production
cd multicore-linux64/tests/charm++/megatest
make pgm
./pgm +p4 (multicore does not support multiple nodes)
cd ../../../../..
Build and test the Charm++/Converse library (MPI version):
cd charm-6.6.1
env MPICXX=mpicxx ./build charm++ mpi-linux-x86_64 --with-production
cd mpi-linux-x86_64/tests/charm++/megatest
make pgm
mpirun -n 4 ./pgm (run as any other MPI program on your cluster)
cd ../../../../..
Download and install TCL and FFTW libraries:
(cd to NAMD_2.10_Source if you're not already there)
wget http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/libraries/fftw-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
tar xzf fftw-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
mv linux-x86_64 fftw
wget http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/libraries/tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
wget http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/libraries/tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64-threaded.tar.gz
tar xzf tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64.tar.gz
tar xzf tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64-threaded.tar.gz
mv tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64 tcl
mv tcl8.5.9-linux-x86_64-threaded tcl-threaded
Optionally edit various configuration files:
(not needed if charm-6.6.1, fftw, and tcl are in NAMD_2.10_Source)
vi Make.charm (set CHARMBASE to full path to charm)
vi arch/Linux-x86_64.fftw (fix library name and path to files)
vi arch/Linux-x86_64.tcl (fix library version and path to TCL files)
Set up build directory and compile:
multicore version: ./config Linux-x86_64-g++ --charm-arch multicore-linux64
network version: ./config Linux-x86_64-g++ --charm-arch net-linux-x86_64
MPI version: ./config Linux-x86_64-g++ --charm-arch mpi-linux-x86_64
cd Linux-x86_64-g++
make (or gmake -j4, which should run faster)
Quick tests using one and two processes (network version):
(this is a 66-atom simulation so don't expect any speedup)
./namd2
./namd2 src/alanin
./charmrun ++local +p2 ./namd2
./charmrun ++local +p2 ./namd2 src/alanin
(for MPI version, run namd2 binary as any other MPI executable)
Longer test using four processes:
wget http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/utilities/apoa1.tar.gz
tar xzf apoa1.tar.gz
./charmrun ++local +p4 ./namd2 apoa1/apoa1.namd
(FFT optimization will take a several seconds during the first run.)
That's it. A more complete explanation of the build process follows.
Note that you will need Cygwin to compile NAMD on Windows.
Download and unpack fftw and tcl libraries for your platform from
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/libraries/. Each tar file
contains a directory with the name of the platform. These libraries
don't change very often, so you should find a permanent home for them.
Unpack the NAMD source code and the enclosed charm-6.6.1.tar archive. This
version of Charm++ is the same one used to build the released binaries
and is more likely to work and be bug free than any other we know of.
Edit Make.charm to point at .rootdir/charm-6.6.1 or the full path to the
charm directory if you unpacked outside of the NAMD source directory.
Run the config script without arguments to list the available builds,
which have names like Linux-x86_64-icc. Each build or "ARCH" is of the
form BASEARCH-compiler, where BASEARCH is the most generic name for a
platform, like Linux-x86_64.
Note that many of the options that used to require editing files can
now be set with options to the config script. Running the config script
without arguments lists the available options as well.
Edit arch/BASEARCH.fftw and arch/BASEARCH.tcl to point to the libraries
you downloaded. Find a line something like
"CHARMARCH = net-linux-x86_64-iccstatic" in arch/ARCH.arch to tell
what Charm++ platform you need to build. The CHARMARCH name is of the
format comm-OS-cpu-options-compiler. It is important that Charm++ and
NAMD be built with the same C++ compiler. To change the CHARMARCH, just
edit the .arch file or use the --charm-arch config option.
Enter the charm directory and run the build script without options
to see a list of available platforms. Only the comm-OS-cpu part will
be listed. Any options or compiler tags are listed separately and
must be separated by spaces on the build command line. Run the build
command for your platform as:
./build charm++ comm-OS-cpu options compiler --with-production
For this specific example:
./build charm++ net-linux-x86_64 tcp icc --with-production
Note that for MPI builds you normally do not need to specify a compiler,
even if your mpicxx calls icc internally, but you will need to use an
icc-based NAMD architecture specification.
The README distributed with Charm++ contains a complete explanation.
You only actually need the bin, include, and lib subdirectories, so
you can copy those elsewhere and delete the whole charm directory,
but don't forget to edit Make.charm if you do this.
The CUDA (NVIDIA's graphics processor programming platform) code in
NAMD is completely self-contained and does not use any of the CUDA
support features in Charm++. When building NAMD with CUDA support
you should use the same Charm++ you would use for a non-CUDA build.
Do NOT add the cuda option to the Charm++ build command line. The
only changes to the build process needed are to add --with-cuda and
possibly --cuda-prefix ... to the NAMD config command line.
If you are building a non-smp, non-tcp version of net-linux with the
Intel icc compiler you will need to disable optimization for some
files to avoid crashes in the communication interrupt handler. The
smp and tcp builds use polling instead of interrupts and therefore
are not affected. Adding +netpoll to the namd2 command line also
avoids the bug, but this option reduces performance in many cases.
These commands recompile the necessary files without optmization:
cd charm/net-linux-icc
/bin/rm tmp/sockRoutines.o
/bin/rm lib/libconv-cplus-*
( cd tmp; make charm++ OPTS="-O0" )
If you're building an MPI version you will probably want to build
Charm++ with env MPICXX=mpicxx preceding ./build on the command line,
since the default MPI C++ compiler is mpiCC. You may also need to
compiler flags or commands in the Charm++ src/arch directory. The
file charm/src/arch/mpi-linux/conv-mach.sh contains the definitions
that select the mpiCC compiler for mpi-linux, while other compiler
choices are defined by files in charm/src/arch/common/.
If you want to run NAMD on InfiniBand one option is to build an ibverbs
library network version by specifying the "ibverbs" option as in:
./build charm++ net-linux-x86_64 ibverbs icc --with-production
You would then change "net-linux-x86_64-icc" to "net-linux-x86_64-ibverbs-icc"
in your namd2/arch/Linux-x86_64-icc.arch file (or create a new .arch file).
Alternatively you could use an Infiniband -aware MPI library.
Run make in charm/CHARMARCH/tests/charm++/megatest/ and run the
resulting binary "pgm" as you would run NAMD on your platform. You
should try running on several processors if possible. For example:
cd net-linux-x86_64-ibverbs-icc/tests/charm++/megatest/
make pgm
./charmrun +p16 ./pgm
If any of the tests fail then you will probably have problems with
NAMD as well. You can continue and try building NAMD if you want,
but when reporting problems please mention prominently that megatest
failed, include the megatest output, and copy the Charm++ developers
at ppl@cs.uiuc.edu on your email.
Now you can run the NAMD config script to set up a build directory:
./config ARCH
For this specific example:
./config Linux-x86-icc --charm-arch net-linux-tcp-icc
This will create a build directory Linux-x86-icc.
If you wish to create this directory elsewhere use config DIR/ARCH,
replacing DIR with the location the build directory should be created.
A symbolic link to the remote directory will be created as well. You
can create multiple build directories for the same ARCH by adding a
suffix. These can be combined, of course, as in:
./config tcl fftw /tmp/Linux-x86-icc.test1
Now cd to your build directory and type make. The namd2 binary and
a number of utilities will be created.
If you have trouble building NAMD your compiler may be different from
ours. The architecture-specific makefiles in the arch directory use
several options to elicit similar behavior on all platforms. Your
compiler may conform to an earlier C++ specification than NAMD uses.
You compiler may also enforce a later C++ rule than NAMD follows.
You may ignore repeated warnings about new and delete matching.
The NAMD Wiki at http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/wiki/ has entries
on building and running NAMD at various supercomputer centers (e.g.,
NamdAtTexas) and on various architectures (e.g., NamdOnMPICH). Please
consider adding a page on your own porting effort for others to read.
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Memory Usage
NAMD has traditionally used less than 100MB of memory even for systems
of 100,000 atoms. With the reintroduction of pairlists in NAMD 2.5,
however, memory usage for a 100,000 atom system with a 12A cutoff can
approach 300MB, and will grow with the cube of the cutoff. This extra
memory is distributed across processors during a parallel run, but a
single workstation may run out of physical memory with a large system.
To avoid this, NAMD now provides a pairlistMinProcs config file option
that specifies the minimum number of processors that a run must use
before pairlists will be enabled (on fewer processors small local
pairlists are generated and recycled rather than being saved, the
default is "pairlistMinProcs 1"). This is a per-simulation rather than
a compile time option because memory usage is molecule-dependent.
Additional information on reducing memory usage may be found at
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/wiki/index.cgi?NamdMemoryReduction
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Improving Parallel Scaling
While NAMD is designed to be a scalable program, particularly for
simulations of 100,000 atoms or more, at some point adding additional
processors to a simulation will provide little or no extra performance.
If you are lucky enough to have access to a parallel machine you should
measure NAMD's parallel speedup for a variety of processor counts when
running your particular simulation. The easiest and most accurate way
to do this is to look at the "Benchmark time:" lines that are printed
after 20 and 25 cycles (usually less than 500 steps). You can monitor
performance during the entire simulation by adding "outputTiming <steps>"
to your configuration file, but be careful to look at the "wall time"
rather than "CPU time" fields on the "TIMING:" output lines produced.
For an external measure of performance, you should run simulations of
both 25 and 50 cycles (see the stepspercycle parameter) and base your
estimate on the additional time needed for the longer simulation in
order to exclude startup costs and allow for initial load balancing.
Multicore builds scale well within a single node. On machines with more
than 32 cores it may be necessary to add a communication thread and run
on one fewer core than the machine has. On a 48-core machine this would
be run as "namd2 +p47 +commthread". Performance may also benefit from
setting CPU affinity using the +setcpuaffinity +pemap <map> +commap <map>
options described in CPU Affinity above. Experimentation is needed.
We provide standard (UDP), TCP, and ibverbs (InfiniBand) precompiled
binaries for Linux clusters. The TCP version may be faster on some
networks but the UDP version now performs well on gigabit ethernet.
The ibverbs version should be used on any cluster with InfiniBand,
and for any other high-speed network you should compile an MPI version.
SMP builds generally do not scale as well across nodes as single-threaded
non-SMP builds because the communication thread is both a bottleneck and
occupies a core that could otherwise be used for computation. As such
they should only be used to reduce memory consumption or if for scaling
reasons you are not using all of the cores on a node anyway, and you
should run benchmarks to determine the optimal configuration.
Extremely short cycle lengths (less than 10 steps) will limit parallel
scaling, since the atom migration at the end of each cycle sends many
more messages than a normal force evaluation. Increasing margin from
0 to 1 while doubling stepspercycle and pairlistspercycle may help,
but it is important to benchmark. The pairlist distance will adjust
automatically, and one pairlist per ten steps is a good ratio.
NAMD should scale very well when the number of patches (multiply the
dimensions of the patch grid) is larger or rougly the same as the
number of processors. If this is not the case, it may be possible
to improve scaling by adding ``twoAwayX yes'' to the config file,
which roughly doubles the number of patches. (Similar options
twoAwayY and twoAwayZ also exist, and may be used in combination,
but this greatly increases the number of compute objects. twoAwayX
has the unique advantage of also improving the scalability of PME.)
Additional performance tuning suggestions and options are described
at http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/wiki/?NamdPerformanceTuning
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Endian Issues
Some architectures write binary data (integer or floating point) with
the most significant byte first; others put the most significant byte
last. This doesn't effect text files but it does matter when a binary
data file that was written on a "big-endian" machine (POWER, PowerPC) is
read on a "small-endian" machine (Intel) or vice versa.
NAMD generates DCD trajectory files and binary coordinate and velocity
files which are "endian-sensitive". While VMD can now read DCD files
from any machine and NAMD reads most other-endian binary restart files,
many analysis programs (like CHARMM or X-PLOR) require same-endian DCD
files. We provide the programs flipdcd and flipbinpdb for switching the
endianness of DCD and binary restart files, respectively. These programs
use mmap to alter the file in-place and may therefore appear to consume
an amount of memory equal to the size of the file.
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