Today’s guest posting comes from Jesper Larsson Träff; he’s Faculty of Informatics, Institute of Information Systems in the Research Group for Parallel Computing at the Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien). Have you ever wondered why
A fun scenario was proposed in the MPI Forum today. What do you think this code will do? MPI_Comm comm, save; MPI_Request req; MPI_Init(NULL, NULL); MPI_Comm_dup(MPI_COMM_WORLD, &comm); MPI_Comm_rank(comm, &rank); save = comm; MPI_Isend(smsg
Last weekend, I was fortunate enough to be able to attend the Midwest Open Source Software Conference (MOSSCon 2013). I met some fascinating people, listened to some great talks, and learned a bunch of new things. All in all, a win. I also presented
I’m very pleased to welcome a new member to the Cisco USNIC/MPI Team: Dave Goodell. Welcome, Dave! (today was his first day) Dave joins us from the MPICH team at Mathematics and Computer Science division at Argonne National Laboratory.
I was just recently informed that my talk was accepted at the Midwest Open Source Software Conference (MOSSCon). w00t! MOSSCon will be held at the University of Louisville, in Louisville, Kentucky, USA, on May 18-19, 2013. It’s being organized
In a prior blog post, I talked about latency analogies. I compared levels of latencies to your home, your neighborhood, a far-away neighborhood, and another city. I talked about these localities in terms of communication. Let’s extend that
The Cisco and Microsoft joint Cross-Animal Technology Project, a well-established player in the field of multi-species collaborative initiatives, is pleased to introduce its next project: a revolution in High Performance Computing (HPC): LOLCODE
Multiple readers have told me that it is difficult for them to understand and/or visualize the effects of latency on their HPC applications, particularly in modern NUMA (non-uniform memory access) and NUNA (non-uniform network access) environments.
A number of you complained when blogs.cisco.com switched to requiring a social medial login to leave comments. It turns out that you were not alone. Industry-wide, it seems that many people do not want to associate their personal Facebook/Twitter/etc.