Filename + lifecycle:
- ADR rename to ADR-NNNN-<cat>-title.md with 8 3-letter category prefixes
(dev / mem / lat / prog / algo / par / api / ver). Numbers stay immutable.
- ADR Lifecycle split into 3 folders, documented in CLAUDE.md Part 2:
docs/adr/ (Accepted), docs/adr-proposed/ (Proposed/Stub/Draft),
docs/adr-history/ (Superseded/Merged). Status field gains "Draft" for
retroactive docs pending verification.
Merges (one ADR per topic, no change-history annotations):
- ADR-0017 absorbs ADR-0019 (Cube NOC + per-PE HBM connectivity, 10 D-items)
- ADR-0014 absorbs ADR-0021 (PE pipeline execution model, 8 D-items incl.
TileToken self-routing and multi-op composite epilogue scope)
- ADR-0023 absorbs docs/ipcq-dma-codesign-hw.md as new "HW Realization
Notes (Informative)" section (D16-D23 + Open HW Questions). codesign-hw.md
deleted; ADR-0019/0021 moved to adr-history with one-line stub status
Retroactive documentation (G4 closures, code-verified):
- ADR-0037 forwarding component (TransitComponent: first-flit overhead,
serial worker, path-based routing, single impl/multiple names)
- ADR-0036 IO_CPU component (target_start_ns global barrier stamping,
per-cube fan-out, response aggregation)
- ADR-0035 M_CPU & M_CPU.DMA component (3 fan-out paths, DMA Resources,
target_start_ns passthrough)
- ADR-0034 HBM controller internal design (per-PC state, address-based
selection, flit-aware per-flit commit, async finalize, command-only
fallback path)
Content updates:
- ADR-0010 expanded to full CLI surface (run/probe/web), retitled
"Command Line Interface and Execution Semantics"
- ADR-0007 D2 rewritten to current state; ADR-0015 supersession notes pruned
- ADR-0005 wrapped in Decision header with D1-D5; ADR-0022 metadata
block replaced with standard Status header
- ADR-0024 trimmed to rank=SIP launcher essentials (D1-D4);
ADR-0027 cleaned of supersession history
- ADR-0033 D6 cleanup: address-based PC selection moved out of future-work
(now documented in ADR-0034 D3); related D1/D3 wording realigned
- Cross-references back-filled in 5 ADRs (G3 gaps closed)
Onboarding docs split:
- docs/onboarding/ created
- moved: hw-architecture-overview.md, latency-model.md, di-presentation.md,
ccl-author-guide{,.en}.md
- references updated in README, ADR-0023{,.en}, src/kernbench/ccl/__init__.py
Source / test / yaml: ADR-NNNN cross-references in docstrings and YAML
comments updated after the merges (ADR-0021->0014 D6, ADR-0019->0017 D8).
No behavior change.
Tooling:
- tools/verify_adr_lang_pairs.py + tests/test_verify_adr_lang_pairs.py
(ADR EN/KO pair invariant checker)
- .claude/commands/report.md tracked (/report slash command)
- .gitignore: allow .claude/commands/*.md while keeping settings files ignored
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
4.3 KiB
ADR-0010: Command Line Interface and Execution Semantics
Status
Accepted
Context
The kernbench CLI is the user-facing entry point of the simulator. It
exposes three subcommands:
run— execute a benchmark against a topology.probe— diagnostic utility for latency / BW measurement.web— interactive topology viewer.
Device enumeration is centralized in the CLI; neither the runtime API nor the simulation engine enumerates devices. Benchmarks remain single-device by design and accept a device identifier as input.
Decision
D1. Benchmark contract — single-device by design
- A benchmark MUST define behavior for a single device only.
- A benchmark MUST accept a device identifier as input.
- Benchmarks MUST NOT enumerate or loop over multiple devices.
Multi-device execution is the CLI's concern (D3), not the benchmark's.
D2. kernbench run — benchmark execution
Required arguments:
--topology <path>: topology YAML file path. Loaded viaresolve_topology().--bench <name>: benchmark name. Resolved viabenches.loader.resolve_bench().
Optional arguments:
--device <selector>(default:all):all— run once per discovered SIP (see D3).sip:<N>— run only on SIP N.- Parsed via
resolve_device().
--verify-data(default: off) — enable Phase 2 data verification (see ADR-0020). When set,engine_factoryconstructs the engine withenable_data=True. After the benchmark runs, a diagnostic summary of recorded ops is printed.
Each invocation runs the benchmark once within a single simulation instance.
D3. Multi-device execution is logically parallel
When --device all (or omitted) and the topology has multiple SIPs:
- Benchmark executions are submitted to a single simulation engine instance.
- Executions are logically parallel in simulation time.
- Inter-device contention is naturally modeled (shared fabric bandwidth, cross-SIP traffic, etc.).
The CLI does NOT spawn multiple OS processes or independent simulation runs — parallelism is internal to one simulation instance.
D4. kernbench probe — latency / BW diagnostic utility
Required argument:
--topology <path>: topology YAML file path.
Optional argument:
--case <name>(default:all) — run a predefined traffic pattern, orallto run every defined case.
Probe runs each pattern through the simulation engine and reports per case:
- End-to-end latency (ns).
- Effective bandwidth (nbytes / total_ns).
- Bottleneck bandwidth (min edge BW along the chosen path).
- Utilization (effective / bottleneck).
Probe additionally validates monotonicity invariants — for example that local-HBM access ≤ cross-PE-within-cube ≤ cross-cube ≤ cross-SIP — and reports violations. Probe is a developer tool for verifying the latency / BW model; it is not a benchmark.
D5. kernbench web — topology viewer
Optional arguments:
--port <N>(default:8765) — HTTP port.--no-open— do not auto-open the browser.
Launches a local HTTP server that renders the compiled topology in
the browser. Distinct from the static docs/diagrams/ artifacts:
docs/diagrams/files are derived at topology-compile time (ADR-0006).kernbench webis interactive — pan/zoom, hover for component attributes, switch between SIP / CUBE / PE views.
D6. Runtime API and simulation engine remain device-scoped
- Runtime API calls operate on one device per invocation.
- The simulation engine schedules all requests deterministically.
- Neither layer enumerates devices.
This invariant keeps each layer testable in isolation; device
enumeration and multi-device fan-out live only in the CLI's run
command (D3).
Consequences
- Benchmark authors write single-device logic; multi-device behavior emerges from the CLI dispatching across SIPs.
- Adding a new subcommand (e.g., trace export, replay) does not require benchmark or runtime-API changes — the CLI is the extension point.
probeandwebare diagnostic / visualization tools, not benchmarks; they bypass the benchmark loader path.
Links
- SPEC R7, R8, R9
- ADR-0007 (Runtime API and Simulation Engine Boundaries)
- ADR-0020 (Two-pass data execution —
--verify-data) - ADR-0006 (Topology compilation and diagram generation —
background for
kernbench web)