International audienceUnmatched computation and storage performance in new HPC systems have led to a plethora of I/O optimizations ranging from application-side collective I/O to network and disk-level request scheduling on the file system side. As we deal with ever larger machines, the interferences produced by multiple applications accessing a shared parallel file system in a concurrent manner become a major problem. These interferences often break single-application I/O optimizations, dramatically degrading application I/O performance and, as a result, lowering machine wide efficiency. This paper focuses on CALCioM, a framework that aims to mitigate I/O interference through the dynamic selection of appropriate scheduling policies. CALCio...