First International Workshop on Performance Portable Programming Models for Accelerators (P^3MA)

Frankfurt, Germany
June 23, 2016

CALL FOR PAPERS

High-Level programming models offer scientific applications a path onto HPC platforms without an undue loss of portability or programmer productivity. For example, using directives, application developers can port their codes to accelerators incrementally while minimizing code changes. Other approaches include Domain Specific Languages, C++ metaprogramming, and runtimes APIs being developed for Exascale which are starting to emerge. Although these approaches aim to introduce abstraction without performance penalty, programming challenges are still manyfold especially with their designs, implementations and application porting experiences on rapidly evolving hardware, some with diverse memory subsystems.

The programming approaches will need to adapt to such developments and make improvements to raise their performance portability that will increase the productivity of accelerators as HPC components. Such improvements are continuously being discussed with standards committees for C++, OpenCL, OpenMP, OpenACC, and Exascale co- design centers for DSLs. This workshop is designed to assess the improved features of programming models (including but not limited to directives-based programming models), their implementations, and experiences with their deployment in HPC applications on multiple architectures.

The workshop will provide a forum for bringing together researchers, vendors, users and developers to brainstorm aspects of heterogeneous computing and its various tools and techniques.

Topics of interest (but are not limited to):

Important Deadlines:

Abstract Submission: April 20, 2016 AoE
Full Paper Submission: May 10, 2016 AoE
Paper Notification: May 31, 2016
Camera Ready Paper: July 20, 2016

Review process

Abstracts and papers need to be submitted via Easy Chair: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=p3ma

All submitted manuscripts will be peer reviewed. The review process is not double blind, i.e., authors will be known to reviewers. Submissions will be judged on correctness, originality, technical strength, significance, quality of presentation, and interest and relevance to the conference scope. Submitted papers may NOT have appeared in or be under consideration for another conference, workshop or journal.

After the reviewing process, the accepted papers will be published in the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) volumes.

We only accept paper submissions which are formatted correctly in LNCS style (single column format) using either the LaTeX document class or Word template. For details on the author guidelines, please refer to Springer's website. Incorrectly formatted papers will be excluded from the reviewing process.

Papers submissions are required to be within 18 pages in the above mentioned LNCS style. This includes all figures and references.

The submissions are "single-blind", i.e. submissions are allowed to include the author names.

Questions? Please contact one of the program chairs.