Difference between revisions of "Applications/Matlab"

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=== Application Details ===
 
=== Application Details ===
 
* Description: MATLAB  is a numerical computing environment and programming language developed by MathWorks, MATLAB allows matrix manipulations, plotting of functions and data, and implementation of algorithms. A  range of toolboxes is available to extend functionality.
 
* Description: MATLAB  is a numerical computing environment and programming language developed by MathWorks, MATLAB allows matrix manipulations, plotting of functions and data, and implementation of algorithms. A  range of toolboxes is available to extend functionality.
* Versions: 2016a, 2016b, 2017a, 2018a, 2020a
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* Versions: 2016a, 2016b, 2017a, 2018a, 2019a, 2020a
* Module names: matlab/2016a  matlab/2016b  matlab/2017a  matlab/2018a matlab/2020a
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* Module names: matlab/2016a  matlab/2016b  matlab/2017a  matlab/2018a matlab/2019a matlab/2020a
 
* License: University of Hull Total Academic Headcount license, available to members of the university for research use
 
* License: University of Hull Total Academic Headcount license, available to members of the university for research use
  

Revision as of 14:14, 17 November 2022

Application Details

  • Description: MATLAB is a numerical computing environment and programming language developed by MathWorks, MATLAB allows matrix manipulations, plotting of functions and data, and implementation of algorithms. A range of toolboxes is available to extend functionality.
  • Versions: 2016a, 2016b, 2017a, 2018a, 2019a, 2020a
  • Module names: matlab/2016a matlab/2016b matlab/2017a matlab/2018a matlab/2019a matlab/2020a
  • License: University of Hull Total Academic Headcount license, available to members of the university for research use

Toolboxes

Matlab on Viper has the following toolboxes available:

Toolbox Toolbox Toolbox Toolbox
MATLAB Filter Design HDL Coder MATLAB Report Generator SimRF
Simulink Financial Instruments Toolbox Model Predictive Control Toolbox Simscape
Aerospace Blockset Financial Toolbox Neural Network Toolbox Simscape Electronics
Bioinformatics Toolbox Fixed-Point Designer Optimization Toolbox Simscape Multibody
Communications System Toolbox Fuzzy Logic Toolbox Parallel Computing Toolbox Simscape Power Systems
Computer Vision System Toolbox Global Optimization Toolbox Partial Differential Equation Toolbox Simulink Coder
Control System Toolbox Image Acquisition Toolbox Phased Array System Toolbox Simulink Control Design
Curve Fitting Toolbox Image Processing Toolbox RF Toolbox Simulink Design Optimization
DSP System Toolbox Instrument Control Toolbox Robotics System Toolbox Stateflow
Database Toolbox LTE System Toolbox Robust Control Toolbox Statistics and Machine Learning Toolbox
Datafeed Toolbox MATLAB Coder Signal Processing Toolbox Symbolic Math Toolbox
Econometrics Toolbox MATLAB Compiler SimBiology System Identification Toolbox
Embedded Coder MATLAB Compiler SDK SimEvents Wavelet Toolbox

Usage Examples

Executables

Executable Description
MatLab By default Matlab will make use of multithreading for certain functions, with the maximum number of computational threads equal to the number of computational cores on the node. If a job or session hasn't requested an appropriate resource, this multithreading can cause contention for CPU resources and negatively impact other users. For this reason when using the standard matlab command please make sure you request appropriate resources by either using an exclusive session with interactive --exclusive or submitting a task with the #SBATCH --exclusive. See Parallel Matlab
matlab ‑singleCompThread If you do not require the possible performance benefits provided by using multiple cores, please run Matlab with ‑singleCompThread option and it will only use a single CPU core. See Parallel Matlab

Interactive

Interactive with full graphical interface (note the -singleCompThread option means Matlab only uses a single core):

[username@login01 ~]$ interactive 
salloc: Granted job allocation 289663
Job ID 289663 connecting to c170, please wait...
Last login: Thu Jan 26 12:59:11 2017 from 10.254.5.246
[username@c170 ~]$ module add matlab/2016a
[username@c170 ~]$ matlab -singleCompThread

Interactive with command line only:

[username@c170 ~]$ matlab -nodisplay -singleCompThread

                                                    < M A T L A B (R) >
                                          Copyright 1984-2016 The MathWorks, Inc.
                                           R2016a (9.0.0.341360) 64-bit (glnxa64)
                                                     February 11, 2016

To get started, type one of these: helpwin, helpdesk, or demo.
For product information, visit www.mathworks.com.

        Academic License

>>

Batch Submission

#!/bin/bash
#SBATCH -J MATLAB           # Job name, you can change it to whatever you want
#SBATCH -N 1                # Number of nodes (for Matlab should be always one)
#SBATCH -o %N.%j.out        # Standard output will be written here
#SBATCH -e %N.%j.err        # Standard error will be written here
#SBATCH -p compute          # Slurm partition, where you want the job to be queued
#SBATCH --exclusive 
 
module purge
module add matlab/2016a
 
matlab -nodisplay -nojvm -nodesktop -nosplash -r my_matlab_m_file

Matlab

[username@login01 ~]$ sbatch MATLABtest.job
Submitted batch job 289522

Parallel Matlab

By default Matlab on Viper will run on a single core as multi-threading conflicts with the schedulers resource management, however, there are two ways in which Matlab can utilize multiple processors:

Multi-threading

Matlab can use multiple threads for certain built-in functions for example linear algebra and numerical functions such as fft, \ (mldivide), eig, svd, and sort. These functions automatically execute on multiple computational threads in a single MATLAB session, allowing them to execute faster on multicore-enabled machines. Additionally, many functions in the Image Processing Toolbox are multithreaded.

Firstly, using the matlab command with the -singleCompThread option:

[username@c170 ~]$ matlab -singleCompThread -nodisplay -nojvm -nodesktop -nosplash -r "maxNumCompThreads , exit"

                                                    < M A T L A B (R) >
                                          Copyright 1984-2016 The MathWorks, Inc.
                                           R2016a (9.0.0.341360) 64-bit (glnxa64)
                                                     February 11, 2016

For online documentation, see http://www.mathworks.com/support
For product information, visit www.mathworks.com.

        Academic License

Warning: maxNumCompThreads will be removed in a future release. Please remove any instances of this function from your code.
> In maxNumCompThreads (line 26)

ans =

     1

Using the standard matlab command, on Viper this starts Matlab with multithreading support enabled:

[username@c170 ~]$ matlab -nodisplay -nojvm -nodesktop -nosplash -r "maxNumCompThreads , exit"

                                                    < M A T L A B (R) >
                                          Copyright 1984-2016 The MathWorks, Inc.
                                           R2016a (9.0.0.341360) 64-bit (glnxa64)
                                                     February 11, 2016

For online documentation, see http://www.mathworks.com/support
For product information, visit www.mathworks.com.

        Academic License

Warning: maxNumCompThreads will be removed in a future release. Please remove any instances of this function from your code.
> In maxNumCompThreads (line 26)

ans =

     28

When using Matlab with multicore enabled, please ensure you have exclusive access to the node, see Exclusive interactive or Exclusive batch jobs.

Parallel Computing Toolbox

The Parallel Computing Toolbox allows you to open a number of workers (separate Matlab engines) on the local node, up to the number of cores on that node (28 for standard nodes in an exclusive session).

>> parpool('local',28)
Starting parallel pool (parpool) using the 'local' profile ... connected to 28 workers.

ans = 

 Pool with properties: 

            Connected: true
           NumWorkers: 28
              Cluster: local
        AttachedFiles: {}
          IdleTimeout: 30 minute(s) (30 minutes remaining)
          SpmdEnabled: true

When using Matlab with the Parallel Computing Toolbox, please ensure you have exclusive access to the node, see Exclusive interactive or Exclusive batch jobs.

Next Steps





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