| CARVIEW |
The Fourth Workshop on the LLVM Compiler Infrastructure in HPC
Workshop held in conjunction with SC17 - Monday, November 13, 2017 - Denver, Colorado, USA
Agenda
LLVM in HPC BoF
Join us at the LLVM in HPC BoF: Tuesday, Nov. 14th, 12:15-1:15pm, in room 601.
Flang Meetup!
Join us at the Flang Meetup: Wednesday, Nov. 15th, 6:30-7:30pm at the Curtis Hotel in the Hopscotch room (3rd floor). 1405 Curtis, St.
Abstract
LLVM, winner of the 2012 ACM Software System Award, has become an integral part of the software-development ecosystem for optimizing compilers, dynamic-language execution engines, source-code analysis and transformation tools, debuggers and linkers, and a whole host of programming-language and toolchain-related components. Now heavily used in both academia and industry, where it allows for rapid development of production-quality tools, LLVM is increasingly used in work targeted at high-performance computing. Research in, and implementation of, program analysis, compilation, execution, and profiling has clearly benefited from the availability of a high-quality, freely-available infrastructure on which to build. This workshop will focus on recent developments, from both academia and industry, that build on LLVM to advance the state of the art in high-performance computing.
In cooperation with: ![]()
Held in conjunction with SC17: The International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis
Format
This workshop will feature contributed papers and invited talks focusing on recent developments, from both academia and industry, that build on LLVM to advance the state of the art in high-performance computing.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Compiler design for highly-concurrent/parallel environments
- Compilation techniques targeted at high-performance computing codes
- Programming-language implementation techniques enabling high performance and high productivity
- Embedding compilation and dynamic execution at scale
- Tools for optimization, profiling, and feedback
- Source code transformation and analysis
- Gap analyses of open-source LLVM-based tools
NEW THIS YEAR: The workshop will hold a lightning-talk session. Please contribute to making this session both vibrant and informative! An abstract and one-page summary is required for consideration.
Deadlines
- Paper submissions due:
September 1, 2017Extended to: September 8, 2017 - Notification to authors of acceptance:
September 28, 2017Delayed until: October 1, 2017 - Camera-ready papers due:
October 11, 2017Updated to: October 8, 2017 - Workshop takes place: November 13, 2017
Please see the SC17 home page for registration deadlines and other information associated with the parent event.
Submissions
We are using EasyChair to manage submissions. Please submit papers to llvmhpc2017. The ACM SIG Proceedings Templates should be used. Papers should be no more than 12 pages (including references and figures). Please also note the ACM Author Rights policy.
Proceedings
The proceedings will be archived in both the ACM Digital Library and IEEE Xplore through SIGHPC. Lightning-talk summaries will not be included in the proceedings.
Organizers
- Hal Finkel, Argonne National Laboratory
Program Committee
| Name | Affiliation |
|---|---|
| Andrew Trick | Apple |
| Cameron McInally | Cray |
| Chandler Carruth | |
| Erik Schnetter | Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics |
| Frank Winter | Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility |
| Gary Funck | Intrepid Technology |
| James Brodman | Intel |
| Jeff Hammond | Intel |
| Jim Cownie | Intel |
| Keno Fischer | Julia Computing, Inc. |
| Michael Wong | Codeplay |
| Nadav Rotem | |
| Pat McCormick | Los Alamos National Laboratory |
| Ralf Karrenberg | NVIDIA |
| Sameer Shende | University of Oregon |
| Tobias Grosser | ETH Zürich |
| Torsten Hoefler | ETH Zürich |
Contact Information
Hal Finkel (hfinkel@anl.gov)