parallel computing speed question when the body of the parfor loop takes about 2 seconds

1 vue (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
I have a question about parallel:
parfor ii=1:N dosomething%% end
in the parfor loop, the time of dosomething is 2 seconds in each loop, and N is about 100. In that condition, is it efficient to use parfor here???
I feel confused about that as I test the time and find the more core I use, the more time I spend!!!!!! Could someone help to answer this question?!!!!

Réponse acceptée

Ken Atwell
Ken Atwell le 13 Mai 2015
It really depends on what "dosomething" is doing. If it is pure computation, it should be a big win. If there is file or network I/O going on, your mileage will vary depending on the application and hardware.
Also keep an eye on memory usage on your computer -- if you're using all of your physical RAM, your computer may be spending much of its time swapping, more than offsetting and gain you'd get from multiprocessor operation.
  2 commentaires
Guanfeng Gao
Guanfeng Gao le 13 Mai 2015
Thanks for your help. I could not quite understand what the network I/O refers to. Actually, in the "do somthing", there only exist some simply computation and another loop to call a c function by mex file. Is it what you are saying?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 13 Mai 2015
Pure computation on a local system is fine. If you were using the Distributed Computing Engine to send to several hosts then there would be network traffic. If you were load()'ing files then there would be file I/O.

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Plus de réponses (1)

Guanfeng Gao
Guanfeng Gao le 13 Mai 2015
Thanks!!! I do not have several hosts or file I/O in my parallel loop!!! However, I am still not satisfied with the speed. E.G. there are 100 iterations (parfor ii=1:100), and for each iteration it takes 2 seconds; when I use 32 cores it takes 129 seconds, which means that the parallel only speedup to "2*100/129~2" than the regular one when I use 32 cores!!!! That really confused me!!!!!!
  1 commentaire
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson le 13 Mai 2015
Are the matrices large? If so then you might be encountering a lot of overhead in transmitting the values back. Try experimenting with drange() instead of parfor()

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Loops and Conditional Statements dans Help Center et File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by