Material

Here you can find presentations from the Final SEA Projects Workshop, held on January 16th, 2024 at Leibniz Supercomputing Centre in Munich, Germany.

Title & AbstractPresenter
The SEA project family
This talk will give a short introduction to the 3 SEA projects and how they link together. 
Hans-Christian Hoppe (JSC), Sai Narasimhamurthy (ParTec), Jesús Escudero-Sahuquillo (UCLM), Pedro J. García (UCLM)Download Presentation
The DEEP-SEA projectHans-Christian Hoppe (JSC)Download Presentation
The IO-SEA project Sai Narasimhamurthy (ParTec)Download Presentation
The RED-SEA projectJesús Escudero-Sahuquillo (UCLM), Pedro J. García (UCLM)Download Presentation
DASI: a user centric data access and storage interface
DASI, a Data Access and Storage Interface, enables users to manage data using domain specific and scientifically meaningful metadata keys, and separates data management from the underlying backend storage technology through abstraction. Based on the FDB object store developed and in operational use at ECMWF, we will describe its concept and how it can be easily adopted by any domain as a data management solution.
Jenny Wong (ECMWF) Download Presentation
The VEF traces framework: collecting traffic traces from modern, highly-demanding applications
This framework is a set of open-source tools that allows to generate traces from applications demanding high network performance. We will describe the different tools, and how the resulting traces can be used to characterise the traffic in modern systems supported by high-performance networks, as well as how these traces can be used to feed interconnection network simulators.
Jesús Escudero-Sahuquillo and Pedro J. García (UCLM)Download Presentation
Optimisation Cycles for Modular Supercomputing and Energy Efficiency
Optimisation cycles encapsulate advanced performance analysis and tuning tools to guide users through the steps required to obtain a certain analysis or optimisation result. We introduce two of these cycles: one for determining on which modules (such as CPU or GPU-based) to best run an application, and one to optimise the energy efficiency of CPU workloads at runtime. 
Alexander Geiß (TUD) and Mathieu Stoffel (Eviden)
Continuous Integration of the HPC SW Stack
Continuous integration is common practice in many fields of computing. We introduce its use for guaranteeing the consistency of the full HPC stack, covering applications, programming models, libraries, and system software, and provide examples on how to use open source SW to achieve this.
Manoel Roemer (FZJ) and Sonja Happ (ParTec)Download Presentation
The Smart Burst Buffer: An example of an ephemeral service and its connection to the long term storage
SBB, as an example of ephemeral IO service, provides workflows with isolation from other applications, buffering and cache, improving time to solution. As an ephemeral service, it relies upon a long term storage service for which the Hestia API has been developed as an abstraction of a tiered storage infrastructure. We will introduce in this talk the IO-SEA run time architecture and the benefits workflows can get of it.
Philippe Couvée (Eviden) and James Grogan (ICHEC)Download Presentation
Joint SEA Demo Hans-Christian Hoppe (JSC), Philippe Couvée (Eviden), Grégoire Pichon (Eviden)Download Presentation