Software Enables Use of Distributed In-System Storage and Parallel File System
UnifyFS software can provide I/O performance portability for applications, enabling them to use distributed in-system storage and the parallel file sy
UnifyFS software can provide I/O performance portability for applications, enabling them to use distributed in-system storage and the parallel file sy
An article on the US Department of Energy website takes a look at the CANcer Distributed Learning Environment, or CANDLE.
Cray will build El Capitan, the first exascale supercomputer for the National Nuclear Security Administration and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
ECP's Center for Efficient Exascale Discretizations is helping applications leverage future architectures by developing state-of-the-art discretization algorithms that better exploit the hardware and deliver a significant performance gain over conventional methods.
Higher resolution and deeper insight along with much faster information delivery are ways exascale computing could improve imaging at X-ray free-electron laser facilities.
Narrative snapshots in time chronicle highlights of some of the Application Development efforts within ECP.
The Ristra project, which is creating a set of codes targeting national-security-relevant multiphysics problems, is making solid progress both in terms of the physics needs and in demonstrating new computer science technologies.
In a video chat, Rick Stevens, principal investigator for the Cancer Distributed Learning Environment (CANDLE) project within ECP, shares information about, and highlights from, CANDLE, a collaborative effort involving four US Department of Energy national laboratories.
From harnessing the power of the atom to sequencing the human genome, the Department of Energy (DOE) has a long history of developing cutting-edge science and technology. One of the fresh challenges DOE has taken on is the use of supercomputers to accelerate cancer research.
Rick Stevens of Argonne National Laboratory spoke with ECP Communications at SC17 in Denver about the ECP project he leads, called CANcer Distributed Learning Environment (CANDLE).