Nov 3, 2015 - The PRACE Hosting Members are France, Germany, Italy and. Spain. PRACE is .... infrastructure. 03/11/2015.
PRACE - Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe Key Performance Indicators Philippe Segers – GENCI (on behalf of PRACE aisbl) GSF-OECD workshop 3rd November 2015, Paris
Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe PRACE is an international not-for-profit association under Belgian law, with its seat in Brussels, born in 2010
PRACE counts 25 members and 2 observers The PRACE Hosting Members are France, Germany, Italy and Spain PRACE is governed by the PRACE Council in which each member has a seat. The daily management of the association is delegated to the Board of Directors PRACE is funded by its members as well as through a series of implementation projects supported by the European Commission 03/11/2015
GSF-OECD workshop: PRACE KPIs
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4 Hosting Members offering core hours on IBM 6 world-class machines JUQUEEN: BlueGene/Q GAUSS/FZJ Jülich, Germany Universe Sciences 18%
Mathematics and Computer Sciences 6%
MareNostrum: IBM BSC, Barcelona, Spain
Fundamental Physics 17%
Chemical Sciences and Materials 29%
Earth System Sciences 9% Engineering and Energy 21%
SuperMUC: IBM GAUSS/LRZ Garching, Germany
Hazel Hen: Cray GAUSS/HLRS, Stuttgart, Germany
Access through PRACE Peer Review Criterion: Scientific Excellence FERMI: IBM BlueGene/Q CURIE: Bull Bullx CINECA , Bologna, Italy GENCI/CEA Bruyères-le-Châtel, France GSF-OECD workshop: PRACE KPIs
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First KPIs considered Success ratio of proposals H-index of applicants Resource allocation
Scientific
Distribution per job size and duration Training events
Economic
Publications, PhD theses Project finance structure, co-funding Financial performance of PRACE members
Social
PRACE raising awareness European end-users company in HPC area
Environmental
Industry participation in PRACE events HPC related job trend Patents and spin-offs Short-term 03/11/2015
Medium-term
Long-term GSF-OECD workshop: PRACE KPIs
Ecological impact 4
Currently implemented KPIs • Impact on evolving research – Offer and demand
Number of projects requested (blue), above technical threshold (red) and awarded (green)
– International collaboration Ratios of awarded ‘foreign’ projects (blue), and resources for awarded ‘foreign’ projects (red) and respective trend-lines
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Currently implemented KPIs • Impact on scientific production – Publications and thesis • Impact on growing know-how – Training events
Scientific production supported by PRACE: publications (blue), scientific talks (red) and thesis (green)
Number of person-days registered at PRACE Training days between 2008 and 2014
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Currently implemented KPIs • Impact on attracting the industrial sector – Training Industrial participation in PATCs training days
– Allocations
Industry participation in PRACE allocations: number of projects with industrial participation (blue) and number of industrial participants (red)
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Data collection • Database from the peer-review tool: – Compiles all information on the calls (resources awarded, machines, project participants, collaborators affiliation, industry partners, etc.)
• Surveys to projects leaders: – Final report at the end of the allocation period – Follow-up 2 years after
• Spreadsheet for training events • Media coverage 03/11/2015
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Limitations and specificities •
Time-frame between computation and scientific/economic exploitation: – Need to stay informed about publications several years after the allocation is done – Long-term impact on competitiveness of industry?
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Complex infrastructure: – Distributed – Virtual access – Shared by multiple scientific communities and type of users
•
A difficult multi-factors impact assessment: – Broad range of actors in the ecosystem: scientists, industrials, vendors, computing centers… – Qualitative (success stories, etc.) more than quantitative – How to assess the overall increase in HPC adoption? – Impact of HPC in European competitiveness embedded in the whole value chain
Lack of consistent economic and scientific data 03/11/2015
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Limitations and specificities • Internal limitations: – – – – –
KPIs defined after the infrastructure Historical data not structured to facilitate impact assessment Not always possible to know usage at the time of data collection Limited resources Some manual processing
• Two levels of impact assessment: – At a European level, for the PRACE infrastructure and HPC in general – At a national level, for hosting a system or participating in the infrastructure 03/11/2015
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Conclusion • PRACE: a distributed e-Infrastructure devoted to serve its users • PRACE Key Performance Indicators: – A tool for continuous improvement process – Designed to asses the fulfilment of its mission – Covering a wide spread of interactions with its stakeholders 03/11/2015
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HPC strategy combining three elements: (a)
Computer Science: towards exascale HPC;
(b)
achieving excellence in HPC applications;
(c)
providing access to the best supercomputing facilities and services for both industry and academia; PRACE - world-class HPC
A special FET initiative focussing on the next generations of exascale computing technology as a key horizontal enabler for advanced modelling, simulation and big-data applications [HPC in FET] Centres of Excellence for scientific/industrial HPC applications in (new) domains that are most important for Europe [e-infrastructures]
infrastructure for the best research [e-infrastructures]
•
complemented with training, education and skills development in HPC
"Excellent Science" part of H2020
Access to best HPC for industry and academia PRACE
• specifications of exascale prototypes • technological options for future systems
• Collaboration of HPC Centres and application CoEs
FETHPC: EU development of Exascale technologies
• identify applications for codesign of exascale systems
• provision of HPC capabilities and expertise Excellence in HPC applications (Centres of Excellence)
• Innovative methods and algorithms for extreme parallelism of traditional/emerging applications