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Final Report: Sublinear Algorithms for In-situ and In-transit Data Analysis at Exascale.
Author(s) -
Janine Camille Bennett,
Ali Pınar,
C. Seshadhri,
David Thompson,
Maher Salloum,
Ankit Bhagatwala,
Jacqueline Chen
Publication year - 2015
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1227346
Subject(s) - computer science , sublinear function , workflow , concurrency , algorithm , distributed computing , computation , process (computing) , theoretical computer science , mathematics , database , programming language , mathematical analysis
Post-Moore’s law scaling is creating a disruptive shift in simulation workflows, as saving the entirety of raw data to persistent storage becomes expensive. We are moving away from a post-process centric data analysis paradigm towards a concurrent analysis framework, in which raw simulation data is processed as it is computed. Algorithms must adapt to machines with extreme concurrency, low communication bandwidth, and high memory latency, while operating within the time constraints prescribed by the simulation. Furthermore, input parameters are often data dependent and cannot always be prescribed. The study of sublinear algorithms is a recent development in theoretical computer science and discrete mathematics that has significant potential to provide solutions for these challenges. The approaches of sublinear algorithms address the fundamental mathematical problem of understanding global features of a data set using limited resources. These theoretical ideas align with practical challenges of in-situ and in-transit computation where vast amounts of data must be processed under severe communication and memory constraints. This report details key advancements made in applying sublinear algorithms in-situ to identify features of interest and to enable adaptive workflows over the course of a three year LDRD. Prior to this LDRD, there was no precedent in applying sublinear techniques to large-scale, physics based simulations. This project has definitively demonstrated their efficacy at mitigating high performance computing challenges and highlighted the rich potential for follow-on research opportunities in this space.

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