SIAM CSE 23 SYCL
SYCL’s impact on algorithms, data structures and implementations
Tom Deakin and Tobias Weinzierl
https://www.siam.org/conferences/cm/conference/cse23
The workshop will be hosted in two parts: MS I and MS II
Computational Science and Engineering software will need to embrace GPU accelerated systems as they prepare for Exascale. GPU accelerated systems dominate the top tier supercomputers. However, with multiple vendors offering competitive solutions, it is not yet clear which programming interface the applications should use as they update their codes for GPUs. With scientific software being used for many years, far beyond the lifetime of any one supercomputer, this investment in software needs to continue to flourish beyond just the next system. SYCL is an open standard that promises portable and performant heterogeneous parallel programming using modern C++. SYCL portability allows programs to run on GPU accelerated systems from all vendors. In this minisymposium, we bring together diverse groups that have recently ported part of their simulation software to SYCL. We ask them to share how the transition to SYCL and GPUs has motivated them to redesign their algorithms and numerical methods, and the implementations of those methods in software. Speakers will share whether the choice of programming model affected the algorithmic and numerical design for their scientific and engineering domains. We will also discuss how SYCL codes characteristically differ from comparable codes on the CPU, directive-based implementations such as OpenMP, or those written for the GPU using CUDA.
Programme
- Tom Deakin: Vision and Scope of the SYCL Minisymposium
- Igor Baratta: Performance-portable matrix-free finite element solvers with SYCL
- Hatem Ltaief: Making HiCMA Hardware-Agnostic with SYCL
- Ravil Dorozhinskii: Performance-portable earthquake simulation with SeisSol and SYCL
- Daniel Arndt: Implementing a SYCL Backend for Kokkos
- Tobias Weinzierl: Flavours of GPU kernels in ExaHyPE
- Will R. Saunders: Exploration of Performance-Portability in the ExCALIBUR Fusion Use Case
- Nisha Patel: Intel Developer Tools for Serious Sycl
Slides (Session 1)
Slides (Session 2)
- Took me and two kids an afternoon to build this fake lego set. But eventually we did succeed. Peano, ExaHyPE, ... all are hosted on LRZ's gitlab and free to download.
- Congratulations to the compute centre next to my alma mater for Blue Lion.
- One of my favourite application domains (of which I understand next to nothing but for which I write software tools) combines proper science with fantastic pictures: sites.google.com/view/uknr/home Happy to join this club! https://sites.google.com/view/uknr/home
- Congratulations to all of our students who participated in the #CIUK student cluster challenge. Well done everybody
- Thanks to Codeplay for acknowledging the opportunity to test and port their #SYCL compiler to NVidia GH on Durham's machines. #CIUK