Threads and Executors

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Motivation

The X10 family of programming languages, including Habanero and our own modest V5, provide a less cumbersome way to write parallel programs with async and finish.

Finish has particularly nice semantics: keeping track of and joining all of its descendant tasks. In this lab we will remove the training wheels for a moment to get some experience with some core Java parallel features Thread and ExecutorService.

Tracking all of the descendant tasks provides us with an opportunity to use a thread safe data structure (ConcurrentLinkedQueue) as well as deal with the complications of weakly consistent iterators.

Background

Java 8 Concurrency Tutorial: Threads and Executors

Code to Implement

(Optional But Recommended) Join All Warm Up

source: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ConcurrentLinkedQueue.html

"Iterators are weakly consistent, returning elements reflecting the state of the queue at some point at or since the creation of the iterator."

JoinAllTestSuite

ThreadsEventually joinAllInQueueViaPoll

Completing this optional warm up will help you when you implement #XQuicksort.

Threads

While we strive to make CSE 231 generally applicable across libraries and languages, it would be madness to have a parallel programming class in Java and not have students know how to create a Thread, start it, and join it. In this section of the lab, you will do just that.

box link: Thread Start and Join

Code To Use

interface ThreadFactory

newThread

class Thread

constructor
start
join

SimpleThreadFactory

class: SimpleThreadFactory.java Java.png
methods: newThread
package: tnx.lab.thread
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: Thread newThread(Runnable target) Sequential.svg (sequential implementation only)

Create and return a new thread with the target Runnable parameter you are passed.

Do *NOT* start this thread.

Certainly, do *NOT* run this thread.

Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.

To repeat: just create a new Thread with the target Runnable and return it.

TAgeSum

class: TAgeSum.java Java.png
methods: sumUpperLowerSplit
package: tnx.lab.thread
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: int sumUpperLowerSplit(int[] ages, ThreadFactory threadFactory) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

You will need use the passed in ThreadFactory to create a new thread or two (at your preference), start any threads you create, and join them.

Think about where you need to start and join any Threads to ensure both correctness and an appropriate amount of parallelism.

Executors

box link: Executor submit and Future get

box link: Executor invokeAll

Code To Use

interface ExecutorService

submit(task)
invokeAll(tasks)

interface Future

get()

NucleobaseCounting

countRangeSequential(chromosome,targetNucleobase,min,maxExclusive)

Slices

createNSlices(data, numSlices).


XNucleobaseCount

This part of the assignment should be very familiar as it is to a large degree implementing the Nucleobase Counting assignment with Executors instead of Habanero. It also adds a divide and conquer implementation of nucleobase counting.

class: XNucleobaseCount.java Java.png
methods: countLowerUpperSplit
countNWaySplit
countDivideAndConquer
countDivideAndConquerKernel
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: student/src/main/java
Circle-information.svg Tip:Use countRangeSequential() from Nucleobase_Counting

lower upper split

method: int countLowerUpperSplit(ExecutorService executor, byte[] chromosome, Nucleobase nucleobase) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

n-way split

method: int countNWaySplit(ExecutorService executor, byte[] chromosome, Nucleobase nucleobase, int numTasks) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

Please feel free to use your own Slices createNSlices(byte[] data, int numSlices). Then use the Java for each loop to iterate over the slices to create your tasks.

divide-and-conquer

method: int countDivideAndConquer(ExecutorService executor, byte[] chromosome, Nucleobase nucleobase, int threshold) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

This method should just get things going by invoking the countDivideAndConquerKernel on the entire chromosome array.

method: int countDivideAndConquerKernel(ExecutorService executor, byte[] chromosome, Nucleobase nucleobase, int min, int maxExclusive, int threshold) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

NOTE: When you get down below the threshold and convert from parallel to sequential execution, do NOT feel compelled to build a sequential divide and conquer. Just invoke countRangeSequential on the remaining range. It is not like divide and conquer gives you a performance benefit in counting like it would for sorting.

XQuicksort

class: XQuicksort.java Java.png
methods: sequentialQuicksort
sequentialQuicksortKernel
parallelQuicksort
parallelQuicksortKernel
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: student/src/main/java

Quicksort is an oldie but a goodie. First developed in 1959 and published in 1961 it is still the go to sorting algorithm today. The JDK8 implementation of Arrays.sort(array) is a DualPivotQuicksort.

Quicksort is also amenable to parallelism. Once the partitioning is done, both sides of the pivot can be sorted completely independently in parallel. This lends itself very nicely to the X10 family of languages as you can freely async as you divide and conquer, then join all of the tasks by wrapping it all in a single call to finish.

In this assignment you will mimic this behavior by submitting tasks to an executor, tracking the returned futures in in a ConcurrentLinkedQueue, then invoking get on all of those futures to mimic the single finish.

Attention niels epting.svg Warning: ConcurrentLinkQueue's iterators are weakly consistent. Do the Join All Warm Up to gain experience with handling this issue.

RiceX Lecture on Quicksort

Attention niels epting.svg Warning:Unlike in Sarkar's and McDowell’s videos which use inclusive maximums, CSE 231 consistently uses exclusive maximums to avoid having to subtract 1 all of the time.


Code To Use

interface Partitioner

partitionRange(data,min,maxExclusive)

class PivotLocation

getLeftSidesUpperExclusive()
getRightSidesLowerInclusive()

sequential

method: void sequentialQuicksort(int[] data, Partitioner partitioner) Sequential.svg (sequential implementation only)

method: void sequentialQuicksortKernel(int[] data, int min, int maxExclusive, Partitioner partitioner) Sequential.svg (sequential implementation only)

parallel

method: void parallelQuicksort(ExecutorService executor, int[] data, int threshold, Partitioner partitioner) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

Make sure to use a thread safe data structure like ConcurrentLinkedQueue and NOT an unsafe data structure like LinkedList.

method: void parallelQuicksortKernel(ExecutorService executor, int[] data, int min, int maxExclusive, Queue<Future<?>> futures, int threshold, Partitioner partitioner) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

(Optional) Parallel Partition Challenge

The partitioning step can also be done in parallel with scan. While not particularly practical, it can get the CPL down to log^k(n).

class: ParallelPartitioner.java Java.png
methods: partitionRange
package: sort.fun.quick
source folder: student/src/main/java

method: PivotLocation partitionRange(int[] data, int min, int maxExclusive) Parallel.svg (parallel implementation required)

Scan is an important part of parallelizing partition:

Testing Your Solution

Correctness

There is a top-level test suite comprised of sub test suites which can be invoked separately when you want to focus on one part of the assignment.

top level

class: ThreadsAndExecutorsTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: tnx.lab
source folder: testing/src/test/java

sub

class: ThreadsTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: tnx.lab.thread
source folder: testing/src/test/java
class: NucleobaseExecutorTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: testing/src/test/java
class: QuicksortExecutorTestSuite.java Junit.png
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: testing/src/test/java

Performance

class: NucleobaseCountTiming.java Noun Project stopwatch icon 386232 cc.svg
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: src/main/java
class: QuicksortTiming.java Noun Project stopwatch icon 386232 cc.svg
package: tnx.lab.executor
source folder: src/main/java


Rubric

As always, please make sure to cite your work appropriately.

Total points: 100

SimpleThreadFactory subtotal: 5

  • Correct newThread (5)

TAgeSum subtotal: 10

  • Correct sumUpperLowerSplit (10)

XNucleobaseCount subtotal: 40

  • Correct count2WaySplit (10)
  • Correct countNWaySplit (15)
  • Correct countDivideAndConquer and countDivideAndConquerKernel (15)

XQuicksort subtotal: 35

  • Correct sequentialQuicksort and sequentialQuicksortKernel (10)
  • Correct parallelQuicksort and parallelQuicksortKernel (25)

Whole project:

  • Clarity and efficiency (10)

Pledge, Acknowledgments, Citations

As always, fill out the Pledge, Acknowledgments, and Citations file: lab3-pledge-acknowledgments-citations.txt