High-performance scientific computing in C++ (ONLINE)

Course/Event Essentials

Event/Course Start
Event/Course End
Event/Course Format
Online
Live (synchronous)

Venue Information

Country: Germany
Venue Details: Click here

Training Content and Scope

Scientific Domain
Technical Domain
Level of Instruction
Intermediate
Advanced
Sector of the Target Audience
Research and Academia
Industry
HPC Profile of Target Audience
Application Users
Application Developers
Language of Instruction

Other Information

Organiser
Supporting Project(s)
PRACE
Event/Course Description

Modern C++, with its support for procedural, objected oriented, generic and functional programming styles, offers many powerful abstraction mechanisms to express complexity at a high level while remaining very efficient. It is therefore the language of choice for many scientific projects. The approval of the latest language standard, C++20, has also opened up new abstraction layers and new exciting ways to organize code at all levels. However, achieving high performance by today's standards requires understanding and exploiting multiple levels of parallelism, as well as understanding C++ code from a performance centric viewpoint.

In this course, the participants will learn how to write C++ programs which better utilize typical HPC hardware resources of the present day. The course is geared towards scientists and engineers already familiar with C++17, who wish to develop maintainable and fast applications. Since C++20 is a relatively large structural change of the C++ language, similar to C++11, novel ways to write expressive, maintainable and fast code are now available to C++ programmers, which will be introduced in the course. The participants will learn techniques to better utilize CPU caches, instruction pipelines, SIMD functionality and multi-threading. Shared memory parallel programming on multiple CPU cores will be introduced using standard C++ parallel STL and Intel (R) Threading Building Blocks. The participants will also learn basic GPGPU programming using C++ template based generic programming techniques.

This course is a PRACE training course.