High-Level Programming Methods and Directives for Multicore and Manycore systems (HPM4MMS)
January 20, 2016
Co-located with HiPEAC 2016
Prague, Czech Republic
CALL FOR PAPERS
As heterogeneous node architectures are becoming more prevalent for mainstream computing systems, the requirement for simple and platform portable programming methods manifests in a number of different programming strategies. Application developers that want to migrate existing to or develop new applications for these novel platforms, are looking for best-practice approaches that offer a reasonable results in a short period of development time. As a result domain specific languages as well as directive based programming methods are welcome strategies when targeting heterogeneous system architectures, since they can abstract the underlying hardware specific details of low-level programming approaches and have shown to offer very good productivity. The holy grail for all such strategies is to achieve not only a platform portability but also offer an application performance the is comparable to the low-level programming models on multiple platforms without code changes. The proposed workshop will solicit papers and presentations both on the methodology of these approaches as well as best-practice experiences from early adopters.
Topics of interest for workshop submissions include (but are not limited to):
- Directives-based programming models for current and emerging systems
- Ideas and implementations for language extensions
- Language extensions or programming strategies for memory hierarchies
- Interoperability and Composability with low-level APIs
- Users’ experiences and implementations
- Scientific libraries interoperability with directive-based programming models
- Exploring high-level prescriptive or descriptive programming approaches
- Hybrid programming approaches (OpenMP + MPI, MPI +X, MPI + OpenACC and so on)
- Task-based programming (asynchronous execution, scheduling)
- Translating to low-level API, design approaches and challenges
- Experiences developing applications for current and emerging systems
- Challenges in maintaining a portable yet single code base
- Debugging, performance evaluation and benchmark studies
- Energy/Power-aware compiler and runtime optimizations for current and emerging systems
Important Deadlines:
Paper Submission Deadline – OCTOBER 30th, 2015
Author notification: DECEMBER 4th, 2015
Final Camera Ready: DECEMBER 11th, 2015
Papers Submission Guidelines:
Papers should present original research and should provide sufficient background material to make them accessible to the broader community.
Format: Submissions are limited to 10 pages in the IEEE format (see http://www.ieee.org/ conferences_events/ conferences/publishing/ templates.html). The 10-page limit includes figures, tables, and appendices, but does not include references, for which there is no page limit.
Use EasyChair to submit your paper:
Proceedings to be published <under discussion>.
Program Chair and Co-Chairs
Christian Terboven, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Guido Juckeland, TU Dresden, Germany
Robert Henschel, Indiana University, USA
Sunita Chandrasekaran, University of Delaware, USA
Steering Committee
Matthias Muller, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Rosa Badia, BSC, Spain
Barbara Chapman, University of Houston, USA
Jeff Vetter, ORNL, USA
Program Committee
Wei Ding (AMD, USA)
Torsten Hoefler (ETH, Zurich)
Michael Klemm (Intel, Germany)
Mark Govette (NOAA, USA)
Costas Bekas (IBM, Switzerland)
Sandra Wienke (RWTH Aachen, Germany)
Adrian Jackson (EPCC, UK)
Andreas Knuepfer (TU Dresden, Germany)
Felix Wolf (TU, Darmstadt)
Saber Feki (KAUST, Saudi Arabia)
Bora Ucar (CNRS and ENS Lyon, France)
Toni Collis (EPCC, UK)
Luc Bouge (ENS Cachan, France)
Steven Olivier (Sandia National Laboratory, USA)
Henri Jin (NASA-Ames, USA)
Will Sawyer (CSCS, ETH, Zurich)
Questions? Please contact one of the workshop organizers:
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