The FHPC workshop aims at bringing together researchers exploring uses<br>of functional (or more generally, declarative or high–level) programming<br>technology in application domains where large–scale computations arise<br>naturally and high performance is essential. Such computations would<br>typically –– but not necessarily –– involve execution on highly parallel<br>systems ranging from multi–core multi–processor systems to graphics<br>accelerators (GPGPUs), reconfigurable hardware (FPGAs), large–scale<br>compute clusters or any combination thereof. It is becoming apparent<br>that radically new and well founded methodologies for programming such<br>systems are required to address their inherent complexity and to<br>reconcile execution performance with programming productivity.<br>The aim of the meeting is to enable sharing of results, experiences,<br>and novel ideas about how high–level, declarative specifications of<br>computationally challenging problems can serve as highly transparent,<br>maintainable, and portable code that approaches (or even exceeds) the<br>performance of machine–oriented imperative implementations.<br>Each FHPC workshop proposes a particular theme for applications where<br>high–performance computing and/or functional programming technology<br>can be applied. For FHPC 2013, the theme is "Large–Scale Simulation",<br>traditionally one of the main driving forces behind supercomputing.<br>A large fraction of compute cycles in supercomputers worldwide is spent<br>on simulation tasks, for various engineering tasks, drug design and<br>other medical simulations, and in different natural science domains.<br>Declarative languages have potential to radically change development<br>practice and workflow for simulation software in these areas.<br>Hence, we particularly encourage submission of application–oriented<br>contributions in the area of simulation.<br>As a general rule, while proposing the theme, the workshop welcomes<br>submissions from all relevant application domains as well as those<br>describing general work on the theory and practice of declarative<br>high–performance computing.<br>
Abbrevation
FHPC
City
Boston
Country
United States
Deadline Paper
Start Date
End Date
Abstract