Passer à la navigation principale Passer à la recherche Passer au contenu principal

Task-based adaptive multiresolution for time-space multi-scale reaction-diffusion systems on multi-core architectures

  • Stéphane Descombes
  • , Max Duarte
  • , Thierry Dumont
  • , Thomas Guillet
  • , Violaine Louvet
  • , Marc Massot
  • Université Côte D’Azur
  • Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Siemens AG
  • Institut Camille Jordan
  • Intel Corporation
  • Exascale Computing Research Laboratory
  • Ecole Centrale Paris

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

A new solver featuring time-space adaptation and error control has been recently introduced to tackle the numerical solution of stiff reaction-diffusion systems. Based on operator splitting, finite volume adaptive multiresolution and high order time integrators with specific stability properties for each operator, this strategy yields high computational efficiency for large multidimensional computations on standard architectures such as powerful workstations. However, the data structure of the original implementation, based on trees of pointers, provides limited opportunities for efficiency enhancements, while posing serious challenges in terms of parallel programming and load balancing. The present contribution proposes a new implementation of the whole set of numerical methods including Radau5 and ROCK4, relying on a fully different data structure together with the use of a specific library, TBB, for shared-memory, task-based parallelism with work-stealing. The performance of our implementation is assessed in a series of test-cases of increasing difficulty in two and three dimensions on multi-core and many-core architectures, demonstrating high scalability.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)29-51
Nombre de pages23
journalSMAI Journal of Computational Mathematics
Volume3
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 1 janv. 2017
Modification externeOui

Empreinte digitale

Examiner les sujets de recherche de « Task-based adaptive multiresolution for time-space multi-scale reaction-diffusion systems on multi-core architectures ». Ensemble, ils forment une empreinte digitale unique.

Contient cette citation