Backed by Spack’s robust functionality, the Packaging Working Group manages the relationships between user software and system software.
Topic: Open-Source Software
UMap uniquely exploits the prominent role of complex memories in today’s servers and offers new capabilities to directly access large memory-mapped datasets.
PERM is a 'C' library for persistent heap management and is intended for use with a dynamic-memory allocator (e.g. malloc, free).
MuyGPs helps complete and forecast the brightness data of objects viewed by Earth-based telescopes.
Leading HPC publication HPCwire presented Spack developers with the Editor's Choice Award for Best HPC Programming Tool or Technology at SC23.
The MFEM virtual workshop highlighted the project’s development roadmap and users’ scientific applications. The event also included Q&A, student lightning talks, and a visualization contest.
LLNL is participating in the 35th annual Supercomputing Conference (SC23), which will be held both virtually and in Denver on November 12–17, 2023.
Merlin is an open-source workflow orchestration and coordination tool that makes it easy to build, run, and process large-scale workflows.
The open-source MFEM library enables application scientists to quickly prototype parallel physics application codes based on PDEs discretized with high-order finite elements.
Alpine/ZFP addresses analysis, visualization, data reduction needs for exascale science applications
The Data and Visualization efforts in the DOE’s Exascale Computing Project provide an ecosystem of capabilities for data management, analysis, lossy compression, and visualization.
Quandary is an open-source C++ package for optimal control of quantum systems on classical high performance computing platforms.
Tammy Dahlgren has worked on a diverse variety of projects at the Lab, including supervisory control systems for the National Ignition Facility, animal disease modeling, mass hierarchical storage systems, RADIUSS, and more.
The Center for Efficient Exascale Discretizations has developed innovative mathematical algorithms for the DOE’s next generation of supercomputers.
With this year’s results, the Lab has now collected a total of 179 R&D 100 awards since 1978. The awards will be showcased at the 61st R&D 100 black-tie awards gala on Nov. 16 in San Diego.
LLNL's Ian Lee joins a Dots and Bridges panel to discuss HPC as a critical resource for data assimilation and numerical weather prediction research.
Collecting variants in low-level hardware features across multiple GPU and CPU architectures.
LLNL's zfp and Variorum software projects are winners. LLNL is a co-developing organization on the winning CANDLE project.
zfp is an open-source C/C++ library for compressed floating-point and integer arrays that support high throughput read and write random access.
Flux, next-generation resource and job management software, steps up to support emerging use cases.
Innovative hardware provides near-node local storage alongside large-capacity storage.
Livermore builds an open-source community around its award-winning HPC package manager.
A Laboratory-developed software package management tool, enhanced by contributions from more than 1,000 users, supports the high performance computing community.
As part of the Exascale Computing Project’s ExaSGD project, a team including LLNL researchers ran HiOp, an open source optimization solver, on 9,000 nodes of Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Frontier exascale supercomputer.
The Lab’s workhorse visualization tool provides expanded color map features, including for visually impaired users.
Learn how to use LLNL software in the cloud. Throughout August, join our tutorials on how to install and use several projects on AWS EC2 instances. No previous experience necessary.