Using symbolic subs call inside parfor loop

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Antonio Bilotta
Antonio Bilotta el 13 de Oct. de 2020
Comentada: Antonio Bilotta el 14 de Oct. de 2020
I have the following pieces of code where the symbolic expressions to be evaluated are quite heavy.
classdef T4
properties (SetAccess = private)
% symbolic properties
xe % vector of symbolic variables
ge % vector or matrix of symbolic expressions depending on xe
% numeric properties
se % numeric vector or matrix
Xe % numeric values to be assigned
end
methods
% all other methods
function T = computeG(T);
T.se = double(subs(T.ge,T.xe,T.Xe));
end
end
end
nT = 5;
Tv(nT,1) = T4;
for i=1:nT
Tv(i) = computeG(Tv(i));
end
I do not get any gain, in fact it is worse if I use instead
parfor i=1:nT
Tv(i) = computeG(Tv(i));
end
  3 comentarios
Antonio Bilotta
Antonio Bilotta el 13 de Oct. de 2020
Thank you very much for your answer. I don't know how to check on this issue and how to allocate, if necessary, one MuPAD engine for each worker.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 14 de Oct. de 2020
My tests show that one mupad kernel process is allocated for each worker. (The kernels use a lot less memory than I might have guessed. They also have about 39 megabytes of shared memory; I am not sure what that is used for.)

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Respuestas (1)

Raymond Norris
Raymond Norris el 13 de Oct. de 2020
Hi Antonio,
You're just not giving each of the workers enough work to do. Maybe you only need to run nT=5, but see what happens when you set it to 100, 200, or 1000. You should then start to see improvements.
Thanks,
Raymond
  5 comentarios
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 14 de Oct. de 2020
My test showed that a separate mupad kernel is launched for each parfor worker, so there would be no need to rewrite the symbolic functions themselves: each worker gets its own (single-threaded) engine.
It is not possible to rewrite the internals of symbolic functions to use parfor / spmd, as the internals of symbolic functions live inside the MuPAD engine, either in the form of binary files are in the form of MuPAD code.
Antonio Bilotta
Antonio Bilotta el 14 de Oct. de 2020
Maybe the situation is not so plain. I am performing some tests with nT=40. In my code the for loop is called several times and in the case of the normal for I get the following times which change only the first time but then they remain quite stable
In the case of the parfor I get the following times which increase as analysis proceeds (I performed only 3 steps but usually more steps are required).
To be more precise the exact code is not so much different (the class function contains 2 "subs" calls).
function T = computeG(T);
T.se = double(subs(T.ge,T.xe,T.Xe)); % evaluation of a vector
T.Ke = double(subs(T.Je,T.xe,T.Xe)); % evaluation of a matrix
end

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