RFR: JDK-8277175 : Add a parallel multiply method to BigInteger [v6]
Paul Sandoz
psandoz at openjdk.java.net
Thu Dec 16 01:37:03 UTC 2021
On Wed, 15 Dec 2021 20:18:39 GMT, kabutz <duke at openjdk.java.net> wrote:
>> BigInteger currently uses three different algorithms for multiply. The simple quadratic algorithm, then the slightly better Karatsuba if we exceed a bit count and then Toom Cook 3 once we go into the several thousands of bits. Since Toom Cook 3 is a recursive algorithm, it is trivial to parallelize it. I have demonstrated this several times in conference talks. In order to be consistent with other classes such as Arrays and Collection, I have added a parallelMultiply() method. Internally we have added a parameter to the private multiply method to indicate whether the calculation should be done in parallel.
>>
>> The performance improvements are as should be expected. Fibonacci of 100 million (using a single-threaded Dijkstra's sum of squares version) completes in 9.2 seconds with the parallelMultiply() vs 25.3 seconds with the sequential multiply() method. This is on my 1-8-2 laptop. The final multiplications are with very large numbers, which then benefit from the parallelization of Toom-Cook 3. Fibonacci 100 million is a 347084 bit number.
>>
>> We have also parallelized the private square() method. Internally, the square() method defaults to be sequential.
>>
>> Some benchmark results, run on my 1-6-2 server:
>>
>>
>> Benchmark (n) Mode Cnt Score Error Units
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.multiply 1000000 ss 4 51.707 ± 11.194 ms/op
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.multiply 10000000 ss 4 988.302 ± 235.977 ms/op
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.multiply 100000000 ss 4 24662.063 ± 1123.329 ms/op
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.parallelMultiply 1000000 ss 4 49.337 ± 26.611 ms/op
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.parallelMultiply 10000000 ss 4 527.560 ± 268.903 ms/op
>> BigIntegerParallelMultiply.parallelMultiply 100000000 ss 4 9076.551 ± 1899.444 ms/op
>>
>>
>> We can see that for larger calculations (fib 100m), the execution is 2.7x faster in parallel. For medium size (fib 10m) it is 1.873x faster. And for small (fib 1m) it is roughly the same. Considering that the fibonacci algorithm that we used was in itself sequential, and that the last 3 calculations would dominate, 2.7x faster should probably be considered quite good on a 1-6-2 machine.
>
> kabutz has updated the pull request incrementally with four additional commits since the last revision:
>
> - Made RecursiveOp fields package-private so that we do not need super. qualifiers in subclasses
> - Incremented depth once instead of on every call
> - Simplified depth calculation to rely on common pool parallelism or the current fork join pool executing the code.
> - Removed serialVersionUID and annotated class with @SuppressWarning("serial") instead
This is looking good. I will create the CSR and propose it. Since the holiday season is imminent it's likely no approval of the CSR will happen on until the new year.
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PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/6409
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