[petsc-users] SNESComputeJacobianDefaultColor use too much memory
Barry Smith
bsmith at mcs.anl.gov
Tue Feb 16 23:30:38 CST 2016
Hmm, something didn't work right with massif. I should give a bunch of ASCII information about how much memory is used at different times in the code. You may need to play around with the massif options and google documentation on how to get it to provide useful information. Once it produces the useful information it will be very helpful.
time=0
mem_heap_B=0
mem_heap_extra_B=0
mem_stacks_B=0
heap_tree=empty
> On Feb 16, 2016, at 9:44 PM, Rongliang Chen <rongliang.chan at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Dear Barry,
>
> Many thanks for your reply.
>
> I checked with the valgrind and did not obtain any outputs (massif.out.<pid>) because the job was killed before it reached the end.
>
> Then I switch to a smaller case, it works well and one of the output is attached (I did not find any useful information in it). The output with the option -mat_coloring_view is followed, which shows that the number of colors is 65. Any ideas for this?
>
> MatColoring Object: 480 MPI processes
> type: sl
> Weight type: RANDOM
> Distance 2, Max. Colors 65535
> Number of colors 65
> Number of total columns 1637350
>
> Best regards,
> Rongliang
>
> On 02/17/2016 01:13 AM, Barry Smith wrote:
>> How many colors are needed?
>>
>> You need to produce a breakdown of where all the memory is being used. For example valgrind with the
>> http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/ms-manual.html
>>
>>
>> Barry
>>
>>
>>> On Feb 16, 2016, at 6:45 AM, Rongliang Chen <rongliang.chan at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Dear all,
>>>
>>> I am using the DMPlex to solve a PDE on a unstructured mesh and I use the SNESComputeJacobianDefaultColor to compute the Jacobian matrix.
>>>
>>> My code works well for small problems (such as problem with 3.3x10^5 cells using 120 cores) but when I increase the number of cells (2.6x10^6 cells using 1920 cores), I go out of memory in the function MatColoringApply. It shows that one of the cores uses over 11G memory. I think this is unreasonable. Do you have any suggestions for debugging this problem?
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>> Rongliang
>>>
>
> <massif.out.12562>
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