Close

Presentation

Birds of a Feather
:
Unified Communication X (UCX) Community
Event Type
Birds of a Feather
Passes
Tags
Communication Optimization
MPI
Networks
Parallel Algorithms
Performance Analysis and Optimization
TimeTuesday, June 18th9:30am - 10:30am
LocationKontrast
DescriptionIn order to exploit the capabilities of new HPC systems and to meet their demands in scalability, communication software needs to scale on millions of cores and support applications with adequate functionality to express their parallelism. UCX is a collaboration between industry, national labs and academia that consolidates multiple technologies that provides a unified open source framework. The UCX project is managed by the UCF consortium (http://www.ucfconsortium.org/) and includes members from LANL, ORNL, ANL, Ohio State University, AMD, ARM, IBM, Mellanox, NVIDIA and more. The session will serves as the UCX community meeting, and will introduce the latest development and specification to HPC developers and the broader user community.

High-level programming models for communication (e.g., MPI, SHMEM) can be built on top of middleware, such as Portals, GASNet, UCCS, and ARMCI or use lower-level network-specific interfaces, often provided by the vendor. While the former offer high-level communication abstractions and portability across different systems, the latter offer proximity to the hardware and minimize overheads related to multiple software layers. An effort to combine the advantages of both is UCX, a communication framework for high-performance computing systems.

UCX has already been integrated with upstream of Open MPI project and OpenSHMEM, being used with MPICH and more. UCX is now being deployed with the US DOE Coral systems. The session will enable a dialog on the future plans for UCX and review the operations of the UCX consortium. It will include performance evaluation based on testing results conducted on several US DoE systems.
BoF Organizer/Speakers
SVP, Marketing
Program Manager for HPC Strategic Partnerships
Principal Research Engineer
Professor of Computer Science and Engineering
Principal Member of Technical Staff
Computer Scientist and Group Lead
Chief Architect for Future Technologies