Files
kernbench2/docs/adr-ko/ADR-0009-api-kernel-execution-messaging.md
T
ywkang a796c1d2f7 ADR: bilingual structure — EN canonical in adr/, KO mirror in adr-ko/
Establish English as the canonical ADR language with Korean translations
held in a parallel docs/adr-ko/ tree as derived artifacts (1:1 mirror).
Promotion from adr-proposed/ to adr/ now writes English to adr/ and the
Korean to adr-ko/; bidirectional sync rule documented in CLAUDE.md.

- Migrate 30 ADRs in docs/adr/: 28 Korean-only translated to English,
  2 bilingual pairs (ADR-0020, ADR-0023) consolidated (.en.md suffix
  dropped). ADR-0023 EN regenerated against KO source which had newer
  HW Realization Notes (D16-D23) section.
- docs/adr-history/ left frozen by design (transitional state).
- CLAUDE.md (Part 2): update ADR Lifecycle for 4-folder layout, mark
  docs/adr-ko/ as a Derived Artifact, add ADR Translation Discipline
  section covering bidirectional sync, conflict resolution (EN wins),
  and proposed-language freedom.
- tools/verify_adr_lang_pairs.py: new verification tool checking pair
  completeness, filename mirroring, ADR-ID match, Status byte-equality.
  Pre-commit hook intentionally not added; run on demand or in CI.
- tests/test_verify_adr_lang_pairs.py: 11 cases including CRLF/LF
  normalization, em-dash title separator, underscore-slug edge case.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-20 01:38:44 -07:00

147 lines
5.0 KiB
Markdown

# ADR-0009: Kernel Execution Messaging and Completion Semantics
## Status
Accepted
## Context
Kernel execution is initiated by the host and proceeds through
device control components:
Host → IO_CPU → M_CPU → PE_CPU → schedulers → engines
Completion propagates in reverse order.
To keep benchmarks simple and topology-agnostic,
kernel execution must be endpoint-driven with deterministic aggregation.
---
## Decision
### D1. Kernel launch is an endpoint request
A kernel launch is initiated by submitting a single KernelLaunch request
to the IO_CPU endpoint.
The runtime API MUST:
- construct the kernel launch request,
- submit it to IO_CPU,
- await a single completion result.
The runtime API MUST NOT orchestrate internal fan-out.
---
### D2. Tensor arguments are passed by metadata
KernelLaunch requests MUST reference tensor arguments via:
- host-owned tensor handles, or
- resolved device address maps derived from those handles.
Bulk tensor data MUST NOT be embedded in kernel launch messages.
---
### D3. Fan-out and aggregation are component responsibilities
- IO_CPU fans out work to M_CPUs.
- M_CPU fans out work to PE_CPUs.
- PE_CPU manages kernel execution and engine dispatch.
Completion semantics:
- M_CPU completes when all targeted PEs complete or a failure policy triggers.
- IO_CPU completes when all targeted CUBEs complete or a failure policy triggers.
---
### D4. Completion and failure propagation
- All messages MUST carry correlation identifiers.
- Completion and failure MUST propagate deterministically to the host.
- The simulation engine provides futures/handles to observe completion.
---
### D5. Launch timing is endpoint-synchronized
All PEs targeted by a single kernel launch MUST begin executing the kernel
body at the same simulated time, regardless of their dispatch path length
from the launch entry point.
Rationale. The dispatch tree Host → IO_CPU → M_CPU → PE_CPU has variable
latency at every level. PEs near their M_CPU receive the launch earlier
than PEs farther away; cubes near an IO_CPU receive it earlier than cubes
farther away. Without synchronization, each PE's kernel begins at a
different `env.now`, making per-PE metrics such as `pe_exec_ns` a function
of dispatch-path geometry rather than of the kernel's behavior —
producing measurement artifacts in benchmarks that time kernel-internal
waits (for example `tl.recv` on cross-cube or cross-SIP hops).
Mechanism.
- `KernelLaunchMsg` carries an optional `target_start_ns: float | None`.
- **IO_CPU** is the canonical stamper. On fan-out to M_CPUs, it
computes `target_start_ns = env.now + max_latency` where
`max_latency` is the maximum, over every target (sip, cube, pe)
tuple, of the **two-leg dispatch chain**:
```
max_latency(sip, cube, pe) =
compute_path_latency_ns(find_node_path(io_cpu, m_cpu(sip, cube)))
+ compute_path_latency_ns(find_node_path(m_cpu(sip, cube), pe_cpu))
- io_cpu.overhead_ns
- m_cpu.overhead_ns
```
This models the actual dispatch as **two sequential Transactions**
(IO_CPU → M_CPU, then M_CPU → PE_CPU). Each leg's
`compute_path_latency_ns` adds its endpoints' `overhead_ns`;
`io_cpu.overhead_ns` is subtracted because IO_CPU has already
paid it before this method runs, and `m_cpu.overhead_ns` is
subtracted once because it appears as endpoint of leg1 *and*
start of leg2 but is paid only once at run time. A single
`find_node_path(io_cpu, pe_cpu)` walk is **not** equivalent —
it can pick a graph path that bypasses M_CPU and silently
under-shoots the prediction for far cubes, breaking the D5
invariant.
The fanned-out sub-Transactions carry **`nbytes = 0`** for
`KernelLaunchMsg` (control message only). Without this,
large kernel-launch payloads would occupy fabric BW on the
shared first hop and serialize the per-cube dispatch, pushing
far M_CPUs past `target_start_ns` and re-introducing the
late-arrival violation.
- **M_CPU** passes an already-stamped `target_start_ns` through
unchanged. Only when the value is absent (e.g. a direct
launch-to-M_CPU unit test) does M_CPU compute a per-cube barrier
`env.now + max(local command-path latency)`.
- **PE_CPU** yields `env.timeout(target_start_ns - env.now)` at the top
of `_execute_kernel`, before recording `pe_exec_start` and invoking
the kernel body.
- When `target_start_ns is None`, PE_CPU falls through to the legacy
unsynchronized behavior — preserving backward compatibility.
IO_CPU-level stamping guarantees every PE across every targeted cube
uses the same barrier sim-time, eliminating both the within-cube
dispatch-offset artifact *and* the cross-cube offset artifact in
multi-cube launches. Models a real-hardware timed-broadcast launch
(latency-equalized dispatch tree).
The synchronization is internal to the engine / IO_CPU / M_CPU / PE_CPU
control plane — runtime API and application kernels are unchanged.
---
## Links
- SPEC R1, R2, R7, R8
- ADR-0007 (Runtime API boundaries)
- ADR-0008 (Tensor deployment)
- ADR-0013 (Verification strategy — V2 fan-out tests)
- ADR-0015 D4 (concrete fabric path for kernel launch)