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Neal Caidin edited this page Nov 15, 2023 · 16 revisions

Are you at SC23?

OpenHPC Talk @ the CIQ Booth

Title: The OpenHPC Project: Recent Developments and Updates

Tuesday, November 13 2:00 PM MST

CIQ Booth #1855

OpenHPC provides a community-driven stack of common ingredients to deploy and manage Linux based HPC clusters. Formed in November 2015 and formalized as a Linux Foundation project in June 2016, OpenHPC continues to see rapid growth in its user community and has added new software components and supports multiple OSes/architectures. At this talk, speakers from the OpenHPC Technical Steering Committee will provide release and technical updates from the project and near-term roadmaps. We then invite open discussion giving attendees an opportunity to provide feedback on OpenHPC, request additional components and configurations, and to discuss general future trends.

Food, Drink, and Networking

Please join us Wednesday evening at Wynkoop Brewing Company for food, drink, and socializing!

Wednesday, November 15 | 6:00 - 8:00 PM

Free, but please register to help us plan for the headcount.

Need an Uber? We provide a free ride to and from Wynkoop. Stop by our booth for details.

LEGO Hunt

Stop by the OpenHPC booth, 871 and pick up an OpenHPC LEGO minifig. Then find accessories at our participating members:

  • Intel - 617
  • Dell - 625
  • SUSE - 535
  • Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center - 1203
  • MGHPCC - 535

New to OpenHPC?

OpenHPC is a Linux Foundation collaborative project currently comprised of +30 member organizations with representation from:

  • Academia
  • Research labs
  • Industry

OpenHPC website

OpenHPC Mission and Vision

Our latest release is OHPC 3.x branch targeting support for three new major OS distribution versions, EL 9, openSUSE Leap 15.5 and openEuler 22.03. This release provides a number of component updates compiled with the GNU compilers version 12.2 and this is the first release of OHPC that uses the clang-based backend for the Intel OneAPI compilers for distributed software instead of the classic compilers. This release also reintroduces support for PMIX with OpenMPI on SLURM-based systems.

Release Notes for v3.0

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