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Haven't heard of it. Internal communication was not a strong suit at LANL... You also had a ton of different teams who all got access to the hardware at roughly the same time and were shotgunning different approaches and coalescing on the better libraries wasn't really a priority at the beginning of roadrunner when I was there. LANL didn't really have project management at the code base level to direct people to upgrade stuff like that, its mostly independent researchers pulling the code bases in different directions. Most of those researchers were physicists in my world and didn't really care about the "engineering" of software, just that their code ran fast and correct enough to get to the next deadline. Then there is a small core of more computer science researchers who did projects like this. If they were successful enough they'd attempt to integrate it into the mainline codes. But their incentives generally were to publish papers about super computer code like this, not necessarily to integrate it into the mainline codes. So often getting something like this in the codes was giving a talk and hoping a physicist would see it and need the extra performance for their needs.

I was not running codes that would utilize even a small fraction of roadrunner so my projects quickly moved to the GPU based test beds for the next gen computer so I didn't get to see these research coalesce. My understanding from people who stayed on roadrunner is that for the most part people didn't adopt too much fanciness for roadrunner as the rewrites were too deep and GPUs were on the horizon. There was a lot of vision about making generic heterogeneous compute frameworks but too my knowledge they didn't pan out and just writing against CUDA, OpenMP, and MPI won the day.




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