Hi!

If you're doing cool things in the area of "Accelerator Programming using
Directives" or related things, please consider submitting a paper.  (I'm
on the Program Committee again.)

| ========================================================================
| Sixth Workshop on Accelerator Programming using Directives (WACCPD 2019)
| (in conjunction with SC19)
| November 18, 2019 - https://waccpd.org
| ========================================================================
| 
| Call for Papers
| ----------------
| The ever-increasing heterogeneity in supercomputing applications has given 
rise to complex compute node architectures offering multiple, heterogeneous 
levels of massive parallelism. As a result, the 'X' in MPI+X demands more 
focus. Exploiting the maximum available parallelism out of such systems 
necessitates sophisticated programming approaches that can provide scalable as 
well as portable solutions without compromising on performance. A programmer's 
expectation from the scientific community is to deliver solutions that would 
allow maintenance of a single code base whenever possible avoiding duplicate 
effort.
| 
| Raising the abstraction of the code is one of the effective methodologies to 
reduce the burden on the programmer while improving productivity. Software 
abstraction-based programming models, such as OpenMP and OpenACC, have been 
serving this purpose over the past several years as the compiler technology 
steadily improves. These programming models address the 'X' component by 
providing programmers with high-level directive-based approaches to accelerate 
and port scientific applications to heterogeneous platforms.
| 
| Recent architectural trends indicate a heavy reliance of future Exascale 
machines on accelerators for performance. Toward this end, the workshop will 
highlight the improvements over state-of-art through the accepted papers and 
prompt discussion through keynote/panel that draws the community's attention to 
key areas that will facilitate the transition to accelerator-based high- 
performance computing (HPC). The workshop aims to showcase all aspects of 
heterogeneous systems discussing innovative high-level language features, 
lessons learned while using directives to migrate scientific legacy code to 
parallel processors, compilation and runtime scheduling techniques among others.
| 
| WACCPD2019 will be co-located with SC19, Denver. In the past five years of 
this workshop, WACCPD has been one of the major forums at SC to bring together 
programming model users, developers, and tools community to share knowledge and 
experiences to tackle emerging complex parallel computing systems.
| 
| 
| Topics of interest for workshop submissions include (but are not limited to)
| -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| * Programming experiences porting applications in any scientific domain
| * Compiler and runtime support for current and emerging architectures
| (e.g. heterogeneous architectures, low-power processors)
| * Experiences in implementing compilers for accelerator directives on
| newer architectures
| * Language-based extensions and its prototype for directive-based
| programming models
| * Abstract handling of complex/heterogeneous memory hierarchies
| * Extensions to and shortcomings of current directives for heterogeneous 
systems
| * Comparisons against lower or higher-level abstractions
| * Application performance evaluation, validation, and lessons learned
| * Modeling, verification and performance analysis tools
| * Auto-tuning and optimization strategies
| * Parallel computing using hybrid programming paradigms (e.g. MPI,
| OpenMP, OpenACC, OpenSHMEM)
| * Asynchronous execution and scheduling (task-based approaches)
| * Scientific libraries interoperability with directive-based models
| * Power/energy studies and solutions targeting accelerators or
| heterogeneous systems
| 
| 
| Workshop Important Deadlines
| -----------------------------
| Submission Deadline: August 22, 2019 AOE
| Author notification: September 30, 2019
| Workshop Ready Deadline: October 10, 2019 AOE
| Camera Ready papers due: December 10, 2019 AoE
| 
| 
| Submission Process & Proceedings
| ---------------------------------
| WACCPD papers will be peer-reviewed and selected for presentation at the 
workshop. The paper presented will be published as post-proceedings in Lecture 
Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) with Springer. Papers should be submitted 
electronically via the SC19 Submission Page 
(https://submissions.supercomputing.org/?page=Submit&id=SC19WorkshopWACCPDSubmission&site=sc19)
 and follow the Springer LNCS format. Submissions are limited to 20 pages. The 
20-page limit includes figures, tables, and appendices, but does not include 
references, for which there is no page limit. Authors are encouraged to provide 
an artifact appendix similar to SC19's reproducibility initiative. If an 
Artifact Description (AD) is provided, the paper is considered to get the Best 
Paper Award.
| 
| Further information can be found on the WACCPD web page: 
https://www.waccpd.org
| 
| 
| Contact
| --------
| Sandra Wienke (RWTH Aachen University, Germany) and Sridutt
| Bhalachandra (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA), WACCPD
| Program Chairs
| Email: organiz...@waccpd.org
| 
| 
| Steering Committee
| -------------------
| * Barbara Chapman (Stony Brook, USA)
| * Duncan Poole (OpenACC, USA)
| * Jeffrey Vetter (ORNL, USA)
| * Kuan-Ching Li (Providence University, Taiwan)
| * Oscar Hernandez (ORNL, USA)
| 
| 
| Program Committee
| ------------------
| * Adrian Jackson (Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre, University of
| Edinburgh, UK)
| * Andreas Herten (Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany)
| * Arpith Jacob (Google, USA)
| * Cheng Wang (Microsoft, USA)
| * Chris J. Newburn (NVIDIA, USA)
| * Christian Iwainsky (Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany)
| * Christian Terboven (RWTH Aachen University, Germany)
| * Christopher Daley (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA)
| * David Bernholdt (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA)
| * Giuseppe Congiu (Argonne National Laboratory, USA)
| * Haoqiang Jin (NASA-Ames, USA)
| * Jeff Larkin (NVIDIA, USA)
| * Kelvin Li (IBM, USA)
| * Manisha Gajbe (Intel, USA)
| * Michael Wolfe (NVIDIA/PGI, USA)
| * Ray Sheppard (Indiana University, USA)
| * Ron Lieberman (AMD, USA)
| * Ronan Keryell (Xilinx, USA)
| * Seyong Lee (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA)
| * Simon Hammond (Sandia National Laboratories, USA)
| * Sameer Shende (University of Oregon, USA)
| * Thomas Schwinge (Mentor Graphics, Germany)
| * Tom Scogland (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA)
| * William Sawyer (CSCS, Switzerland)
| 
| 
| Publicity Chair: Neelima Bayyapu (NMAM Institute of Technology,
| Karnataka, India)
| Web Chair: Shu-Mei Tseng (University of California, Irvine, USA)


Grüße
 Thomas

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to