Eighth Annual Workshop for the Energy Efficient HPC Working Group (EE HPC WG)
Organizers
Event Type
Workshop

Energy
Performance
Power
State of the Practice
TimeSunday, November 12th9am - 5:30pm
Location704-706
DescriptionThis annual workshop is organized by the Energy Efficient HPC Working Group (http://eehpcwg.llnl.gov/). This workshop closes the gap between facility and IT system with regards to energy efficiency analysis and improvements. For sustainable exascale computing, power and energy are a main concern, which can only be addressed by taking a holistic view combining the HPC facility, HPC system, HPC system software, and the HPC application needs. The EE HPC WG, which is a group with over 700 members from ~25 different countries, provides this cross-sectional perspective.
This workshop is unique in that it provides a forum for sharing power and energy related information and research from supercomputing centers from around the world. Discussion and audience participation is encouraged. There are presentations, panels and discussions. Presenters are mostly from major governmental and academic supercomputing centers. The panels encourage discussion around more controversial topics and include panelists from supercomputing centers, academic institutions as well as the vendor community. Topics include case studies of energy efficient operational lessons learned; the power grid- or “what you need to know about the power grid before adding a 10 MW step-function load generator”; the United States Department of Energy’s Path Forward and other Exascale programs; and the software stack’s implications for energy efficiency.
Arthur S Buddy Bland from Oak Ridge National Laboratory will be the keynote speaker. Buddy has seen more than 30 years of HPC deployment at ORNL and his keynote will provide insight into operations and energy efficiency for some of the largest supercomputers.
This workshop is unique in that it provides a forum for sharing power and energy related information and research from supercomputing centers from around the world. Discussion and audience participation is encouraged. There are presentations, panels and discussions. Presenters are mostly from major governmental and academic supercomputing centers. The panels encourage discussion around more controversial topics and include panelists from supercomputing centers, academic institutions as well as the vendor community. Topics include case studies of energy efficient operational lessons learned; the power grid- or “what you need to know about the power grid before adding a 10 MW step-function load generator”; the United States Department of Energy’s Path Forward and other Exascale programs; and the software stack’s implications for energy efficiency.
Arthur S Buddy Bland from Oak Ridge National Laboratory will be the keynote speaker. Buddy has seen more than 30 years of HPC deployment at ORNL and his keynote will provide insight into operations and energy efficiency for some of the largest supercomputers.
Organizers