ARCHER News
Tuesday 22nd January 2019
- ARCHER Annual User Survey 2018
- RSE Webinar: The Journey Matters More than the Destination - Python Weirdness with Metaclasses and Descriptors
- Webinar: Developing Dynamic Load Balancing library for wsiFoam
- HPC-Europa3 Transnational Access programme
- Proposed Module deletions
- Training : Upcoming ARCHER Training Opportunities
ARCHER Annual User Survey 2018
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 20 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 at: https://edin.ac/2FO9mvn
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.
RSE Webinar: The Journey Matters More than the Destination - Python Weirdness with Metaclasses and Descriptors
1300 GMT, Wednesday 30 January 2019
Christopher Cave-Ayland, Senior Research Computing Engineer, University of Southampton
Join Link: https://eu.bbcollab.com/guest/f2396fd7d40c42ea81bc606ef580291c
Abstract: This talk grew out of a seemly simple question. How can I (without getting really really bored) take a Python library written in the style of C++ and make it more Pythonic? The answer(s) I will share in this talk provided an interesting tour of some of the key features of the Python language. In particular those that make Python different than C++ and fundamentally impact the design principles of the language.
Was the end result useful? Probably not, but I learned a lot about the inner workings of Python on the way. In particular in this talk I will review some of the finer details of how Python classes are created, how property decorators work and how to create potentially useful variations upon them.
The target library in question was the Python interface to the OpenMM simulation package (openmm.org). The resulting Pythonic version of the library is named KAPOW (https://github.com/cc-a/kapow).
Bio: Chris Cave-Ayland is based at the University of Southampton working as part of the local High Performance Computing team. He previously worked for several years as a postdoc developing the Fortran + Python Monte Carlo molecular simulation code ProtoMS.
Webinar: Developing Dynamic Load Balancing library for wsiFoam
Wednesday 6th February 2019 15:00
Dr. Xiaohu Guo, STFC and Dr. Scott Brown, University of Plymouth present their recent eCSE work.
Offshore and coastal engineering fields are using increasingly larger and more complex numerical simulations to model wave-structure interaction (WSI) problems, in order to improve understanding of safety and cost implications. Therefore, an efficient multi-region WSI toolbox, wsiFoam, is being developed within an open-source community- serving numerical wave tank facility based on the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code OpenFOAMR , as part of the Collaborative Computational Project in Wave Structure Interaction (CCP-WSI).
Full details and join link : http://www.archer.ac.uk/training/virtual/index.php
HPC-Europa3 Transnational Access programme
Collaborative research visits using High Performance Computing
Call for applications: closing date on 21st February 2019
HPC-Europa3 funds research visits for computational scientists in any discipline which can use High Performance Computing (HPC). Visits can be made to research institutes in Finland, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden or the UK. UK-based researchers can benefit in two ways: either by visiting a research group elsewhere in Europe, or by hosting a research visitor from another country.
What does HPC-Europa3 provide?
- Funding for travel, living and accommodation expenses for visits of up to 13 weeks.
- Access to world-class High Performance Computing (HPC) facilities.
- Technical support to help you make best use of the HPC systems.
- Collaborative environment with an expert in your field of research.
Who is the programme open to?
- Researchers of all levels, from postgraduate to full professors.
- Researchers from academia or industry.
- Researchers currently working in a European Union country or Associated State (see http://bit.ly/2PkVsSV for full list of Associated States).
- Researchers may not visit a group in the country where they currently work.
- A small number of places are available for researchers working outside these countries - please contact staff@hpc-europa.org for more information.
How do I apply?
Apply online at http://www.hpc-europa.org
The next closing date is 21st February 2019. Closing dates are held 4 times per year. Applications can be submitted at any time. You should receive a decision approximately 6 weeks after the closing date.
For more information and to apply online, visit: http://www.hpc-europa.org/
Proposed Module deletions
We would like to delete some older modules.
Full details of the modules to be deleted can be found at 2019-01-23-module_deletions and these will be deleted during the planned maintenance on Wednesday 23rd January 2019.
Please contact the ARCHER helpdesk if you have any concerns about the module deletions.
Upcoming Training Opportunities
Registration open now
- Message-passing Programming with MPI, Online, Wednesday Afternoons, 20, 27 Feb, 6 & 20 Mar
- Threaded programming, Southamption, 2-4 April 2019
- Message-passing Programming with MPI, Southampton, 24-26 April 2019
Further training opportunities will be added to this page soon.
Full details and registration at http://www.archer.ac.uk/training/index.php