Historically, high-performance computing (HPC), has primarily involved tightly coupled simulations executed in synchronous fashion across nodes. More recently, other paradigms within research computing have become common where the workload is not a single large coupled task, but instead very many modest tasks with little to no dependency on each other. These could be data processing and analysis tasks, machine-learning experiments, bioinformatics tasks, or parameter searches in a calculation.

In these many-task, high-throughput computing (HTC) workloads, researchers often attempt some form of parallelization within their application language (e.g., Python, R, or MATLAB ®). This is tedious, fraught with difficulty for most users, lacking flexibility, and is a distraction from the research concerns of the project. It would be better to use a distinct workflow automation tool to manage the many individual tasks.

This workshop outlines this paradigm on a traditional SLURM cluster along with several solutions. Different tools and techniques are discussed in an escalating fashion covering various features and pitfalls. Finally, a demonstration of the hyper-shell utility will showcase the level of sophistication possible both for individuals and research groups in managing task execution. (hyper-shell.readthedocs.io)

Location
Online via Zoom
Event Contact
ewa [at] purdue.edu