High Performance Computing on Vector Systems 2009 | ISBN 9783642440946

High Performance Computing on Vector Systems 2009

herausgegeben von Sabine Roller, Katharina Benkert, Martin Galle, Wolfgang Bez und Hiroaki Kobayashi
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonSabine Roller
Herausgegeben vonKatharina Benkert
Herausgegeben vonMartin Galle
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Bez
Herausgegeben vonHiroaki Kobayashi
Buchcover High Performance Computing on Vector Systems 2009  | EAN 9783642440946 | ISBN 3-642-44094-0 | ISBN 978-3-642-44094-6

High Performance Computing on Vector Systems 2009

herausgegeben von Sabine Roller, Katharina Benkert, Martin Galle, Wolfgang Bez und Hiroaki Kobayashi
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonSabine Roller
Herausgegeben vonKatharina Benkert
Herausgegeben vonMartin Galle
Herausgegeben vonWolfgang Bez
Herausgegeben vonHiroaki Kobayashi
This book covers the results of the Tera op Workbench, other projects related to High Performance Computing, and the usage of HPC installations at HLRS. The Tera op Workbench project is a collaboration between the High Performance C- puting Center Stuttgart (HLRS) and NEC Deutschland GmbH (NEC-HPCE) to s- port users in achieving their research goals using High Performance Computing. The rst stage of the Tera op Workbench project (2004–2008) concentrated on user’s applications and their optimization for the former ag ship of HLRS, a - node NEC SX-8 installation. During this stage, numerous individual codes, dev- oped and maintained by researchers or commercial organizations, have been a- lyzed and optimized. Within the project, several of the codes have shown the ability to outreach the TFlop/s threshold of sustained performance. This created the pos- bility for new science and a deeper understanding of the underlying physics. The second stage of the Tera op Workbench project (2008–2012) focuses on c- rent and future trends of hardware and software developments. We observe a strong tendency to heterogeneous environments on the hardware level, while at the same time, applications become increasingly heterogeneous by including multi-physics or multi-scale effects. The goal of the current studies of the Tera op Workbench is to gain insight in the developments of both components. The overall target is to help scientists to run their application in the most ef cient and most convenient way on the hardware best suited for their purposes.