DocumentCode
3516710
Title
Keynote
Author
Gropp, William D
Author_Institution
Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
fYear
2010
fDate
June 28 2010-July 2 2010
Abstract
Clusters revolutionized computing by making supercomputer capabilities widely available. But one of the main drivers of that revolution, the rapid doubling of processor clock rates, ran out of steam several years ago. To maintain (or even increase) the historic rate of improvement in computing power, processor designs are rapidly increasing parallelism at all levels, including more functional units, more cores, and ways to share resources among threads. Heterogeneous designs that use more specialized processors such as GPGPUs are becoming common. The scale of high-end systems is also getting larger, with 1000-core systems becoming commonplace and systems with over 300,000 cores becoming operational in 2011. However, the software and algorithms for these systems are still basically the same as when the cluster revolution began. Drawing on experiences with the sustained PetaFLOPS system, called Blue Waters, to be installed at Illinois in 2011, and with exploratory work into Exascale system designs, this talk will discuss some of the challenges facing the high performance and cluster community as scalability becomes increasingly important and reviews some of the developments in algorithms, programming models, and software frameworks that must complement the evolution of high performance computing hardware.
Keywords
clocks; computer graphic equipment; coprocessors; flip-flops; parallel machines; Blue Waters; Exascale system designs; PetaFLOPS system; heterogeneous designs; high performance computing; processor clock rates; processor designs; supercomputer capabilities;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
High Performance Computing and Simulation (HPCS), 2010 International Conference on
Conference_Location
Caen
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-6827-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HPCS.2010.5547164
Filename
5547164
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