ARCHER News
Tuesday 6th February 2018
- Exascale Applications and Software Conference (EASC 2018) - Edinburgh, UK. 17-19 April 2018 - Call for posters
- HPC Europa: EC-funded research visits using High Performance Computing
- ARCHER Annual User Survey 2018
- Providing Feedback on ARCHER<
- Summer of HPC: Fully funded places for HPC placements around Europe
- State of the ART I/O Tools - Virtual Tutorial
- Supercomputing MOOC
- Training : Upcoming ARCHER Training Opportunities
Exascale Applications and Software Conference (EASC 2018) - Edinburgh, UK. 17-19 April 2018 - Call for posters
Conference Update: Our keynote speakers are: Jeffrey Vetter (group leader, future technologies group at Oak Ridge National Lab), Dominic Harlow (consultant at the FIA), Andreas Olofsson, (program Manager in the Microsystems Technology Office at DARPA) and Satoshi Matsuoka (Professor of Global Scientific Information Center at Tokyo Institute of Technology.) More details about our keynote speakers, as well as their topics, can be found on the EASC website.
It's not too late to showcase your work at EASC!
Hot Topic Posters: Poster submissions on recent or on-going research in the topics of interest listed at www.easc2018.ed.ac.uk/call-for-participation are warmly welcomed. Poster presenters will have the opportunity to present a lightning talk (1-2 minutes) introducing the topic of their poster. Please send a brief abstract (max. 100 words, plus one image) to info@easc2018.ed.ac.uk by 1st of March 2018.
Early bird registration now open
Registration is now open and you will be able to enjoy our early bird discount until the 28th of March 2018. Please visit www.easc2018.ed.ac.uk/registration to register and for more details.
More information
For full information please see the EASC2018 homepage: www.easc2018.ed.ac.uk.
HPC Europa
HPC-Europa is an interdisciplinary EC-funded programme which allows researchers to carry out short "transnational access" visits to collaborate with a research department working in a similar field while at the same time gaining access to High Performance Computing facilities.
Researchers in the UK can benefit from this programme in two ways: by hosting researchers from Europe within their own group, or by making a research visit to a department in Finland, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain or Sweden.
We would like to inform people that the third call for HPC-Europa applicants closes on Wednesday 28th February 2018 (23:59 CET).
Future closing dates will be held approximately every 3 months, and the HPC-Europa3 programme continues until April 2021.
If you have not heard of HPC-Europa before, further information and the on-line application form can be found at www.hpc-europa.org and any questions not answered by the information on the webpage can be emailed to staff@hpc-europa.org.
ARCHER Annual User Survey 2017
We are committed to continually improving the ARCHER Service and would like to request your input to help us understand what is important to you, where the Service is working well and where there is scope for improvement. The ARCHER Annual User Survey consists of just 9 questions and should take only a few minutes of your time to complete. There are opportunities to add more detailed comments if you wish.
For each survey response received, we will donate £1 to Save The Children.
We are also offering 5 prizes of 3000 kAU on ARCHER for users who complete the survey. Winners can choose to forgo the kAU prize and for each winner that does this we will donate a further £20 to Save The Children. Winners will be drawn at random from all respondents who have left contact details after the closing date of Wednesday 21 February 2018 and the winners notified by e-mail. The prizes are only available to people with existing ARCHER user accounts.
You can find the survey on the ARCHER Website at: www.archer.ac.uk/community/surveys/annual2017.php.
Thank you in advance for taking the time to complete this survey. The responses will be used to try and improve the service for you and to help identify key areas for service development.
Providing Feedback on ARCHER
Feedback from users on the ARCHER service is a key to helping us provide the best service possible to researchers. We are currently gathering feedback from ARCHER users via the ARCHER Annual Survey but there are a couple of other important mechanisms you can use to provide feedback at any time:
- Quality Tokens: all ARCHER users can feedback on the current performance of the ARCHER service through the SAFE using Quality Tokens. This mechanism allows you to rate the performance of ARCHER and leave a comment as to why you chose the rating you did. See: www.archer.ac.uk/documentation/safe-guide/safe-guide-users.php#token.
- Query Feedback: all In Depth queries that are handled by the ARCHER computational science and engineering (CSE) support team provide a direct link for users to use to feedback on how their issue has been handled by the team.
In addition to the valuable feedback we gain from these mechanisms, which helps us to improve the ARCHER service, we donate £1 to Save the Children for each response that we receive.
Summer of HPC: Fully funded places for HPC placements around Europe
Are you, or is someone you know, an early-stage postgraduate or late-stage undergraduate student? If so, you are invited to apply for the PRACE Summer of HPC 2018 programme, which will be held in July & August 2018. The programme consists of a training week and two months of placement at top HPC centres around Europe. The programme affords participants the opportunity to learn and share information about PRACE and HPC, and includes accommodation, a stipend, and travel to their HPC centre placement. Please visit summerofhpc.prace-ri.eu for more info.
Supercomputing MOOC
Began 15th January 2018 and runs for 5 weeks. You can join at any point during the course.
Discover how supercomputers work and the real-life scientific breakthroughs made possible by today's computer simulations.
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/supercomputing/
State of the ART I/O Tools - Virtual Tutorial
Wednesday 28th February 2018 15:00 Online
Elsa Gonsiorowski, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
I/O has historically been an afterthought in application development and performance analysis. As processing power increases and accelerators increase performance, Amdahl's law increasingly points to I/O as an opportunity for performance optimization. Unfortunately, the tool framework for analysis of I/O performance is not as robust as that for computational performance. Tools that exist, such as IOR and Darshan, target a very small slice of I/O performance. Additionally complicating this space is the introduction of hierarchical storage into the I/O space. With the increased prevalence of burst buffers and other forms of hierarchical storage, we can expect to find new answers to historically well-studied problems such as optimal checkpointing frequency.
This talk will cover basic I/O strategies and cover state-of-the-art I/O tools that can be used to prepare for burst buffer architectures. It will include MACSio (an I/O benchmark emulating physics-simulations) and the Scalable / Checkpoint Restart (SCR) library.
Upcoming Training Opportunities
Registration open now
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Registration open
- Message-Passing programming with MPI Online over four Wednesday afternoons Starting Wednesday 31st January 2018
- Object-Oriented programming with Fortran STFC Daresbury 27-28 February 2018
- Data Analytics with HPC Belfast 28 February - 1 March 2018
- Hands-on Introduction to HPC Edinburgh 1-2 March 2018
- Porting and Optimisation Workshop Oxford 8 March 2018
- Efficient Parallel IO on ARCHER Cambridge 20 - 21 March 2018
- Threaded Programming Southampton 20 - 22 March 2018
- Scientific Programming with Python ATI London Dates tbc April 2018
- Message-Passing programming with MPI Southampton 11 - 13 April 2018
Full details and registration at http://www.archer.ac.uk/training/index.php