Energy Efficiency trends in HPC: what high-energy and astrophysicists need to know
By: Estela Suarez , Jorge Amaya , Martin Frank and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes supercomputers use less power for faster results.
The growing energy demands of HPC systems have made energy efficiency a critical concern for system developers and operators. However, HPC users are generally less aware of how these energy concerns influence the design, deployment, and operation of supercomputers even though they experience the consequences. This paper examines the implications of HPC's energy consumption, providing an overview of current trends aimed at improving energy efficiency. We describe how hardware innovations such as energy-efficient processors, novel system architectures, power management techniques, and advanced scheduling policies do have a direct impact on how applications need to be programmed and executed on HPC systems. For application developers, understanding how these new systems work and how to analyse and report the performances of their own software is critical in the dialog with HPC system designers and administrators. The paper aims to raise awareness about energy efficiency among users, particularly in the high energy physics and astrophysics domains, offering practical advice on how to analyse and optimise applications to reduce their energy consumption without compromising on performance.
Similar Papers
Harvesting energy consumption on European HPC systems: Sharing Experience from the CEEC project
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
Makes supercomputers use less power for faster results.
Core Hours and Carbon Credits: Incentivizing Sustainability in HPC
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
Charges computers for energy used, not just speed.
Extracting Practical, Actionable Energy Insights from Supercomputer Telemetry and Logs
Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing
Saves computer energy by watching how it works.