From: Brad C. <br...@cr...> - 2016-05-17 05:22:37
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Dear Chapel Community -- Two quick announcements regarding Chapel-related workshops: 1) CHIUW 2016: First, as a final reminder, the 3rd annual CHIUW workshop will be held next week on Friday May 27th at IPDPS. This year's program features four full-length talks, ten short talks, and a keynote by Nikhil Padmanabhan, Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Yale University: "Chapel in the (Cosmological) Wild." In addition, on Saturday, May 28th, we will hold a half-day Chapel code camp for those interested in programming in Chapel alongside members of the community. For full program details, please see: http://chapel.cray.com/CHIUW2016.html 2) PAW16 CFP: Second, if you've got some good Chapel applications work brewing and you missed the opportunity to publish it at CHIUW this year, read on to learn about a new workshop named PAW: the PGAS Applications Workshop. PAW16 will be held in conjunction with SC16 in Salt Lake City, Utah on November 14th and is soliciting full research papers as well as shorter extended abstracts describing applications work being done in PGAS languages, due July 31st. See the full call for papers below for further information. Thanks, and we hope to see many of you next week! -Brad Chamberlain (on behalf of the CHIUW and PAW committees) ------- CALL FOR PAPERS PAW16: PGAS Applications Workshop http://sourceryinstitute.github.io/PAW/ November 14, 2016 - Salt Lake City, Utah Held in conjunction with SC16 http://sc16.supercomputing.org/ In cooperation with SIGHPC SUMMARY The race towards Exascale computing is on, and a lot of stress is put on researchers to break the boundaries of productivity and efficiency imposed by traditional programming models. Partitioned Global Address Space (PGAS) languages are an effective alternative, and the most promising path towards sustainable programming environments for exascale machines. Languages such as UPC, Fortran, Chapel, and X10 are now more widely available than ever, thanks to increased support from vendors and open-source communities. PGAS models also take the form of meta-languages and libraries, such as Unified Parallel C++ (UPC++), Co-Array C++, OpenSHMEM, MPI-3 and Global Arrays. These have the benefit of being integrated with existing languages, simplifying the learning curve for existing programmers. The increasing availability of PGAS compilers and support software opens up more opportunities than ever for researchers and developers to test new strategies and port applications to more demanding requirements. SCOPE AND AIMS The scope of the PAW workshop is to provide a forum for exhibiting case studies of PGAS programming models in the context of real-world applications as a means of better understanding practical applications of PGAS technologies. We encourage the submission of papers and talks detailing practical PGAS applications, including characterizations of scalability and performance, of expressiveness and programmability, as well as any downsides or areas for improvement in existing PGAS models. In addition to informing other application programmers about the potential that is available through PGAS programming, the workshop is designed to communicate these experiences to compiler vendors, library developers, and system architects in order to achieve broader support for PGAS programming across the community. TOPICS Topics include, but are not limited to: * Novel application development using the PGAS model * Real-world examples demonstrating performance, compiler optimization, error checking, and reduced software complexity. * Performance evaluation of applications running under PGAS * Algorithmic models enabled by PGAS model * Compiler and runtime environments * Libraries using/supporting PGAS and applications * Benefits of hardware abstraction and data locality on algorithm implementation. DATES * Submission Deadline: July 31, 2016 * Author Notification: September 1, 2016 * Camera Ready: October 1, 2016 * Workshop Date: November 14, 2016 SUBMISSION Submissions are solicited in two categories: * Full-length papers presenting novel research results: Full-length papers will be published in the workshop proceedings in cooperation with SIGHPC. Submitted papers must be original work that has not appeared in and is not under consideration for another conference or a journal. Papers shall not exceed eight (8) pages including text, appendices, and figures. References are not included. * Extended abstracts summarizing published/preliminary results: Extended abstracts will be evaluated separately and are not intended to prevent the work from being submitted to other forums for publication. Extended abstracts shall not exceed four (4) pages. Submissions shall be submitted through EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=paw16); they must conform to ACM Guidelines (https://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template). Accepted full-length papers will be given longer presentation slots at the workshop than the abstract-only option. WORKSHOP CHAIR * Karla Morris - Sandia National Laboratory ORGANIZING COMMITTEE * Bradford L. Chamberlain - Cray Inc. * Salvatore Filippone - Cranfield University * Bill Long - Cray Inc. * Katherine A. Yelick - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory * Yili Zheng - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIR * Bill Long - Cray Inc. PROGRAM COMMITTEE CO-CHAIR * Salvatore Filippone - Cranfield University PROGRAM COMMITTEE * Gheorghe Almasi - IBM * Bradford L. Chamberlain - Cray Inc. * Daniel Chavarria - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory * Bert de Jong - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory * Salvatore Filippone - Cranfield University * Tarek El-Ghazawi - George Washington University * David Grove - IBM * Jeff Hammond - Intel * Oscar Hernandez - Oak Ridge National Laboratory * Amir Kamil - University of Michigan * John Mellor-Crummey - Rice University * Karla Morris - Sandia National Laboratory * Nick Park - DoD * Damian W. I. Rouson - Sourcery Institute * Lauren Smith - DoD * Katherine A. Yelick - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory * Yili Zheng - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory In case of questions please email us at: pa...@cr... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mobile security can be enabling, not merely restricting. Employees who bring their own devices (BYOD) to work are irked by the imposition of MDM restrictions. Mobile Device Manager Plus allows you to control only the apps on BYO-devices by containerizing them, leaving personal data untouched! https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/304595813;131938128;j _______________________________________________ Chapel-announce mailing list Cha...@li... https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/chapel-announce |