Computational research can analyze models and/or data to reach new conclusions in faster ways or more complex scenarios. UCF has a 4000+ core cluster for general-purpose computation for research across many fields of academic work, and a 21-node GPU cluster for specialized computation.
This workshop will review capabilities of the UCF Advanced Research Computing Center in general, with a focus on the two clusters (known as Stokes and Newton). Storage system usage, job scheduling, account balancing, example slurm script and job submission will be covered with a demonstration. The demonstration will include examples of job that uses only CPU or GPU, available visualization software on the clusters. A brief introduction to the national (ACCESS) as well as state HPC cluster (HiPerGator) which are outside of UCF campus will also be shared.
Presented by Glenn Martin, Ph.D., Kei Long
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