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High performance computing co-design strategies

Ang, James A.

The MEMSYS Call for Papers contains this passage: Many of the problems we see in the memory system are cross-disciplinary in nature - Their solution would likely require work at all levels, from applications to circuits. Thus, while the scope of the problem is memory, the scope of the solutions will be much wider. The Department of Energy's (DOE) high performance computing (HPC) community is thinking about how to define, support and execute work at all levels for the development of future supercomputers to run our portfolio of mission applications. Borrowing a concept from embedded computing, the DOE HPC community is calling our work at all levels co-design [1]. Codesign for embedded computing is focused on hardware/software partitioning of activities to execute a well-defined task within specific constraints. Co-design for general-purpose HPC has many dimensions for both the work to be performed and the constraints, e.g. hardware designs, runtime software, applications and algorithms. The subject of this extended abstract is a description of two alternative DOE HPC co-design strategies. While DOE co-design efforts include more than the memory system, as noted in the MEMSYS call, the memory system impacts applications, circuits and all levels between.