E2SC 2016Posted in

4th International Workshop on Energy Efficient Supercomputing

Event Dates

Nov 14, 2016 - Nov 14, 2016

Location

Salt Lake City, UH

Submission Deadline

Sep 02, 2016

Website

4th International Workshop on

Energy Efficient SuperComputing (E2SC)

November 14th, 2016

Held in conjunction with SC’16, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

November 13th-18th 2016

Call For Papers

Description

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We will be ushering in an era with power and energy consumption as the

primary concerns for scalable computing in the exascale era and beyond. To

achieve viable high performance, revolutionary methods are required with a

stronger integration among hardware features, system software and applications.

Equally important are the capabilities for fine-grained spatial and temporal

measurement and control to facilitate energy efficient computing across all

layers. Current approaches for energy efficient computing rely heavily on power

efficient hardware in isolation. However, it is pivotal for hardware to expose

mechanisms for energy efficiency to optimize power and energy consumption for

various workloads and to reduce data motion, a major component of energy use.

At the same time, high fidelity measurement techniques, typically ignored in

data-center level measurement, are of high importance for scalable and energy

efficient inter-play in different layers of application, system software and

hardware.

This workshop seeks to address important energy efficiency aspects in the

HPC community that have not been previously addressed in the data center or

cloud computing communities. Emphasis is given to the applications view

related to significant energy efficiency improvements and to the required

hardware/software stack that must include necessary power and performance

measurement and analysis harnesses.

Current tools are often limited by hardware capabilities and their lack of

information about the characteristics of a given workload/application. In the

same manner, hardware techniques, like dynamic voltage frequency scaling, are

often limited by their granularity (very coarse power management) or by their

scope (a very limited system view). More rapid realization of energy savings

will require significant increases in measurement resolution and optimization

techniques. Moreover, the interplay between performance, power and

reliability add another layer of complexity to this already difficult group of

challenges.

Workshop Focus

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We encourage submissions in the following areas:

– Tools for analyzing power and energy with different granularities and

scope from hardware (e.g. component, core, node, rack, system) or

software views (e.g. threads, tasks, processes, etc) or both.

– Techniques that enable power and energy optimizations at different

scale levels for HPC systems.

– Integration of power aware techniques in applications and throughout

the software stack of HPC systems.

– Characterization of current state-of-the-art HPC system and

applications in terms of Power.

– Disruptive hardware or infrastructure technologies for energy-efficient

supercomputing

– Analysis of future technologies that will provide improved energy

consumption and management on future HPC systems.

– Tools and techniques for exploring trade-offs between energy efficiency

and resilience.

Organizing Committee

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General Chairs: Kirk Cameron, Virginia Tech, USA

Adolfy Hoisie, PNNL, USA

Darren Kerbyson, PNNL, USA

David Lowenthal, Arizona State University, USA

Dimitrios S. Nikolopoulos,Queen’s University of Belfast,UK

Sudha Yalamanchili, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA

Program Chair: Kevin Barker, PNNL, USA

Rong Ge, Marquette University, USA

Publicity Chair: Joseph Manzano, PNNL, USA

European Liaison: Michele Weiland, EPCC, UK

Proceedings Chair: Andres Marquez, PNNL, USA

Provisional Program Committee

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Natalie Bates Energy Efficient HPC Working Group, USA

Laura Carrintgton San Diego Supercomputing Center, USA

Sunita Chandrasekaran University of Delaware, USA

Vladimir Getov University of Westminster, UK

Roberto Gioiosa Pacific Northwest National Lab, USA

Eric van Hensbergen ARM, USA

Karen Karavanic Portland State University, USA

Hyesoon Kim Georgia Tech, USA

Dong Li Oak Ridge National Lab, USA

Aniruddha Marathe Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA

Benoit Meister Reservoir Labs, USA

Lenny Oliker Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA

Tapasya Patki Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA

Barry Rountree Lawrence Livermore National Lab, USA

Sameer Shende University of Oregon, USA

Shauwein (Leon) Song Pacific Northwest National Lab, USA

Nick Wright Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA

Important Dates

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Paper Submission 2nd September 2016

Paper Notification 23rd September 2016

Final Papers Due 3rd October 2016

Conference Date 14th November 2016

Submission Guidelines

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Papers should not exceed eight single-space pages (including figures, tables

and references) using a 10-point on 8.5×11-inch pages. Submissions will be

judged on correctness, originality, technical strength, significance,

presentation quality and appropriateness. Submitted papers should not have

appeared in or under consideration for another venue. A full peer-review

processes will be followed with each paper being reviewed by at least 3

members of the program committee. Submissions will be made through EasyChair

(https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=e2sc)