pre-printWith the onset of extreme-scale computing, I/O constraints make it increasingly difficult for scientists to save a sufficient amount of raw simulation data to persistent storage. One potential solution is to change the data analysis pipeline from a post-process centric to a concurrent approach based on either in-situ or in-transit processing. In this context computations are considered in-situ if they utilize the primary compute resources, while in-transit processing refers to offloading computations to a set of secondary resources using asynchronous data transfers. In this paper we explore the design and implementation of three common analysis techniques typically performed on large-scale scientific simulations: topological analys...
With the increasing power of the HPC hardware systems, numerical simulations are heading towards ex...
International audienceReducing the amount of data stored by simulations will be of utmost importance...
International audienceWhile many parallel visualization tools now provide in situ visualization capa...
Abstract—With the onset of extreme-scale computing, I/O constraints make it increasingly difficult f...
High-performance computing resources are currently widely used in science and engineering areas. Typ...
A key trend facing extreme-scale computational science is the widening gap between computational and...
International audienceHigh performance computing systems are today composed of tens of thousands of ...
Increasing processing capabilities and input/output constraints of supercomputers have increased the...
This paper targets an important class of applications that requires combining HPC simulations with d...
Nowadays, we have entered the era of big data. In the area of high performance computing, large‐scal...
In situ visualization on high-performance computing systems allows us to analyze simulation results ...
International audienceIn situ processing proposes to reduce storage needs and I/O traffic by process...
Numerical simulations present challenges as they reach exascale because they generate petabyte-scale...
While the exascale computing era is approaching, the growing gap between computing resources and IO ...
pre-printAs scientific applications target exascale, challenges related to data and energy are becom...
With the increasing power of the HPC hardware systems, numerical simulations are heading towards ex...
International audienceReducing the amount of data stored by simulations will be of utmost importance...
International audienceWhile many parallel visualization tools now provide in situ visualization capa...
Abstract—With the onset of extreme-scale computing, I/O constraints make it increasingly difficult f...
High-performance computing resources are currently widely used in science and engineering areas. Typ...
A key trend facing extreme-scale computational science is the widening gap between computational and...
International audienceHigh performance computing systems are today composed of tens of thousands of ...
Increasing processing capabilities and input/output constraints of supercomputers have increased the...
This paper targets an important class of applications that requires combining HPC simulations with d...
Nowadays, we have entered the era of big data. In the area of high performance computing, large‐scal...
In situ visualization on high-performance computing systems allows us to analyze simulation results ...
International audienceIn situ processing proposes to reduce storage needs and I/O traffic by process...
Numerical simulations present challenges as they reach exascale because they generate petabyte-scale...
While the exascale computing era is approaching, the growing gap between computing resources and IO ...
pre-printAs scientific applications target exascale, challenges related to data and energy are becom...
With the increasing power of the HPC hardware systems, numerical simulations are heading towards ex...
International audienceReducing the amount of data stored by simulations will be of utmost importance...
International audienceWhile many parallel visualization tools now provide in situ visualization capa...