


Community Workshops for Common Workflows
Objective
As a component of DiRAC’s Federation Project, in February 2022 two workshops took place in London in which DiRAC reached out to computational scientists in other fields to share experiences and explore the extent to which common workflows could be the basis of defining UKRI-wide computing services in the future UKRI Digital Research Infrastructure.

Summary of work undertaken
Each workshop took place at the Royal College of Physicians:
The first on 9th February focused on Memory Intensive (MI) Workflows (ie. memory-bound problems such as computational cosmology currently served by the COSMA facility in Durham)
The second on 23rd February focused on Extreme Scaling (ES) Workflows (ie. problems requiring tightly-coupled systems of cpus/gpus such as lattice QCD currently served by the Tursa facility in Edinburgh)
The workshops featured presentations and discussions prompted by the question “what kind of machine is ideally suited to your problem?”
Output
The output is the in-person workshops from which two reports were generated and can be found below:
Output
The workshop presentation slides can be viewed below:
Workshop on Memory Intensive Workflows in Scientific Computing
Simon Hands, Mark Wilkinson, Ed Bennett
Alastair Basden, Aidan Chalk, Matthieu Schaller,
Debora Sijacki
Ian Bush, Peter Coveney, Sergei Dudarev, Alin-Marin Elena, Phil Hasnip, Scott Woodley
Ben Rogers, Stephen Longshaw, Spencer Sherwin
Parashkev Nachev, Robert Gray
Nils Wedi, Tobias Weinzierl
Rob Akers, Andy Davis, Shaun DeWitt, Stan Pamela
Workshop on Extreme Scaling Workflows in Scientific Computing
Simon Hands, Mark Wilkinson, Ed Bennett
Luigi del Debbio, Biagio Lucini,
Antonin Portelli, James Richings
Vassil Alexandrov, Alin-Marin Elena,
Dimitar Pashov, Andrea Townsend-Nicholson, Scott Woodley
Charles Laughton
Pier Luigi Vidale, Nils Wedi
Max Boleininger, James Cook, Andy Davis,
Shaun DeWitt, Leo Ma, Joseph Parker