Distarray

Latest version: v0.6.0

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0.3

This is the second development release.

Noteworthy improvements in 0.3 include:
- support for distributions over a subset of processes;
- distributed reductions with a simple NumPy-like API: `da.sum(axis=3)` ;
- an `apply()` function for easier computation with process-local data;
- performance improvements and reduced communication overhead;
- cleanup, renamings, and refactorings;
- test suite improvements for parallel testing; and
- start of a more frequent release schedule.

DistArray is not ready for real-world use. We want to get input from the
larger scientific-Python community to help drive its development. The API is
changing rapidly and we are adding many new features on a fast timescale.
DistArray is currently implemented in pure Python for maximal flexibility.
Performance improvements are ongoing.

Existing features

Distarray:
- has a client-engine (or master-worker) process design -- data resides on the
worker processes, commands are initiated from master;
- allows full control over what is executed on the worker processes and
integrates transparently with the master process;
- allows direct communication between workers bypassing the master process for
scalability;
- integrates with IPython.parallel for interactive creation and exploration of
distributed data;
- supports distributed ufuncs (currently without broadcasting);
- builds on and leverages MPI via MPI4Py in a transparent and user-friendly
way;
- supports NumPy-like structured multidimensional arrays;
- has basic support for unstructured arrays;
- supports user-controllable array distributions across workers (block,
cyclic, block-cyclic, and unstructured) on a per-axis basis;
- has a straightforward API to control how an array is distributed;
- has basic plotting support for visualization of array distributions;
- separates the array’s distribution from the array’s data -- useful for
slicing, reductions, redistribution, broadcasting, and other operations;
- implements distributed random arrays;
- supports `.npy`-like flat-file IO and hdf5 parallel IO (via `h5py`);
leverages MPI-based IO parallelism in an easy-to-use and transparent way;
and
- supports the distributed array protocol [protocol]_, which allows
independently developed parallel libraries to share distributed arrays
without copying, analogous to the PEP-3118 new buffer protocol.

Planned features and roadmap
- Distributed slicing
- Re-distribution methods
- Integration with Trilinos [Trilinos]_ and other packages [petsc]_ that
subscribe to the distributed array protocol [protocol]_
- Distributed broadcasting
- Distributed fancy indexing
- MPI-only communication for non-interactive deployment on clusters and
supercomputers
- Lazy evaluation and deferred computation for latency hiding
- Out-of-core computations
- Extensive examples, tutorials, documentation
- Support for distributed sorting and other non-trivial distributed algorithms
- End-user control over communication and temporary array creation, and other
performance aspects of distributed computations

History

Brian Granger started DistArray as a NASA-funded SBIR project in 2008.
Enthought picked it up as part of a DOE Phase II SBIR [SBIR]_ to provide a
generally useful distributed array package. It builds on IPython,
IPython.parallel, NumPy, MPI, and interfaces with the Trilinos suite of
distributed HPC solvers (via PyTrilinos [Trilinos]_).

.. [protocol] http://distributed-array-protocol.readthedocs.org/en/rel-0.10.0/
.. [Trilinos] http://trilinos.org/
.. [petsc] http://www.mcs.anl.gov/petsc/
.. [SBIR] http://www.sbir.gov/sbirsearch/detail/410257

0.3.0

0.2.0

**Documentation**: http://distarray.readthedocs.org
**License**: Three-clause BSD
**Python versions**: 2.7 and 3.3
**OS support**: *nix and Mac OS X

DistArray aims to bring the strengths of NumPy to data-parallel high-performance computing. It provides distributed multi-dimensional NumPy-like arrays and distributed ufuncs, distributed IO capabilities, and can integrate with external distributed libraries, like Trilinos. DistArray works with NumPy and builds on top of it in a flexible and natural way.

Brian Granger started DistArray as a NASA-funded SBIR project in 2008. Enthought picked it up as part of a DOE Phase II SBIR [0] to provide a generally useful distributed array package. It builds on IPython, IPython.parallel, NumPy, MPI, and interfaces with the Trilinos suite of distributed HPC solvers (via PyTrilinos) [1].

Distarray:
- has a client-engine (or master-worker) process design -- data resides on the worker processes, commands are initiated from master;
- allows full control over what is executed on the worker processes and integrates transparently with the master process;
- allows direct communication between workers bypassing the master process for scalability;
- integrates with IPython.parallel for interactive creation and exploration of distributed data;
- supports distributed ufuncs (currently without broadcasting);
- builds on and leverages MPI via MPI4Py in a transparent and user-friendly way;
- supports NumPy-like structured multidimensional arrays;
- has basic support for unstructured arrays;
- supports user-controllable array distributions across workers (block, cyclic, block-cyclic, and unstructured) on a per-axis basis;
- has a straightforward API to control how an array is distributed;
- has basic plotting support for visualization of array distributions;
- separates the array’s distribution from the array’s data -- useful for slicing, reductions, redistribution, broadcasting, all of which will be implemented in coming releases;
- implements distributed random arrays;
- supports `.npy`-like flat-file IO and hdf5 parallel IO (via h5py); leverages MPI-based IO parallelism in an easy-to-use and transparent way; and
- supports the distributed array protocol [2], which allows independently developed parallel libraries to share distributed arrays without copying, analogous to the PEP-3118 new buffer protocol.

This is the first public development release. DistArray is not ready for real-world use, but we want to get input from the larger scientific-Python community to help drive its development. The API is changing rapidly and we are adding many new features on a fast timescale. For that reason, DistArray is currently implemented in pure Python for maximal flexibility. Performance improvements are coming.

The 0.2 release's goals are to provide the components necessary to support upcoming features that are non-trivial to implement in a distributed environment.

Planned features for upcoming releases:
- Distributed reductions
- Distributed slicing
- Distributed broadcasting
- Distributed fancy indexing
- Re-distribution methods
- Integration with Trilinos [1] and other packages [3] that subscribe to the distributed array protocol [2]
- Lazy evaluation and deferred computation for latency hiding
- Out-of-core computations
- Extensive examples, tutorials, documentation
- Support for distributed sorting and other non-trivial distributed algorithms
- MPI-only communication for non-interactive deployment on clusters and supercomputers
- End-user control over communication and temporary array creation, and other performance aspects of distributed computations

[0] http://www.sbir.gov/sbirsearch/detail/410257
[1] http://trilinos.org/
[2] http://distributed-array-protocol.readthedocs.org/en/rel-0.10.0/
[3] http://www.mcs.anl.gov/petsc/

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