ECFD workshop, 5th edition, 2022
Contents
- 1 Description
- 2 News
- 3 Agenda
- 4 Thematics / Mini-workshops
- 4.1 Combustion - K. Bioche, VUB
- 4.2 Static and dynamic mesh adaptation - G. Balarac, LEGI
- 4.3 Multi-phase flows - M. Cailler, SAFRAN TECH
- 4.4 Numerics - G. Lartigue, CORIA
- 4.5 Turbulent flows - P. Bénard, CORIA
- 4.6 Compressible - L. Bricteux, UMONS
- 4.7 User experience - J. Leparoux, SAFRAN TECH
- 4.8 Hackathon - G. Staffelbach, CERFACS
Description
- Event from 23th to 28th of January 2022
- Location: Centre Bonséjour, Merville-Franceville, near Caen (14)
- Two types of sessions:
- common technical presentations: roadmaps, specific points.
- mini-workshops. Potential workshops are listed below.
- Free of charge
- More than 50 participants from academics (CERFACS, CORIA, IMAG, LEGI, EM2C, UMONS, UVM, VUB, UCL, TUDelft), HPC center/experts (GENCI, AMD, CINES, CRIANN) and industry (Safran, Ariane Group, Siemens-Gamesa).
- Objectives
- Bring together experts in high-performance computing, applied mathematics and multi-physics CFDs
- Identify the technological barriers of exaflopic CFD via numerical experiments
- Identify industrial needs and challenges in high-performance computing
- Propose action plans to add to the development roadmaps of the CFD codes
News
- 03/11/2021: First announcement of the 5th Extreme CFD Workshop & Hackathon !
- 13/01/2022: After discussions with the participants, the 5th Extreme CFD Workshop & Hackathon is maintained as an in-person event! It will be also possible to attend to the plenary sessions and participate remotely to the workshop.
- 14/01/2022: The ECFD5 program is online! The plenary sessions will be announced soon!
- 20/01/2022: The plenary sessions are now defined:
- P1 - 24/01/2022: GPU porting challenges and quantum computing, présentation machine Adastra by G. Staffelbach (CERFACS) + Presentation of the new cluster from CINES called Adastra by C. Andrieu (CINES)
- P2 - 25/01/2022: News, perspectives and future of GPU computing applied to CFD by A. Toure (AMD)
- P3 - 26/01/2022: Theory, applications and perspectives of the Lattice-Boltzmann Method by P. Boivin (M2P2)
- P4 - 27/01/2022: Concepts and notions of mesh adaptation by C. Dapogny (LJK)
- 23/04/2022: The ECFD5 event has now started !! LinkedIn post
Agenda
Thematics / Mini-workshops
These mini-workshops may change and cover more or less topics. This page will be adapted according to your feedback.
Combustion - K. Bioche, VUB
Static and dynamic mesh adaptation - G. Balarac, LEGI
Multi-phase flows - M. Cailler, SAFRAN TECH
D3: convergence of the interface curvature computation. The computation of interface curvature in a levelset framework is based on the classic formula as divergence of the gradient of the levelset function. This function being computed at 2nd order, one obtains a O(0) curvature, meaning that the error does not decrease with mesh refinement. We have implemented in YALES2 a strategy proposed by Emmanuel Maître and collaborators in a finite element method based on the regularization (filtering) of the levelset gradient and curvature. This strategy has been tested for the simple test case of a static circular interface. We used two types of filters (simple gather-scatter or bilaplacian as developed by Lola Guedot (PhD thesis 2015)) on different mesh types (split quadrilaterals, isotropic triangular mesh, unstructured triangular mesh). The results are encouraging since a O(1) convergence is obtained in all cases. Further work is needed to tune the filter properties (amplitude and size) for different spatial resolutions and levelset "narrow band" width.
Numerics - G. Lartigue, CORIA
Turbulent flows - P. Bénard, CORIA
- Sub-project 1: Optimization of the actuator set for several wind turbines in YALES2 (F. Houtin Mongrolle, S. Gremmo, E. Muller & B. Duboc)
- Sub-project 6: Tools for rough wall modelling (A. Barge, S. Meynet)
Compressible - L. Bricteux, UMONS
User experience - J. Leparoux, SAFRAN TECH
Hackathon - G. Staffelbach, CERFACS
AMD GPU hardware is still relatively unknown in our CFD community. This hackathon was the opportunity to deep dive into the AMD dev environment to prepare the arrival of AdAstra at CINES. Both YALES and AVBP have been ported to the AOMP framework using ROCm 4.5 on the GRID5000 Neowise system. CPU execution posed no issues and we were able to focus on GPU Offloading using OpenMP. On the YALES2 side, a mini-app encompassing the typical YALES2 structure hierarchy and loop execution was extracted from the code to evaluate different porting strategies and on the AVBP side the current OpenACC GPU offloading was translated to OpenMP focusing on the viscosity computation kernel. We learnt that the current supported standard of OpenMP in ROCm 4.5 does not allow for direct offloading of reference values inside an derived type structure but is was possible to use aliases such as pointers or flat array copies to do the job. This should be solved with the support of OpenMP 5.0 Another troublesome issues, was the lack of support for offloading of array vector operations (ex : array(:) = 1.0 ) rendering the explicitation of the loops for these manadatory.
Some bugs remain and it is encouraged to use the latest compiler version when working on the porting ( the release of flang 14.0.1 saved us a lot of time as we had started with 14.0.0 ). Offloading of the miniapp of YALES2 yielded a times 60 acceleration of the kernel whereas the offloading of the viscosity model in a full avbp simulation yielded an 7 times factor in performance when comparing on core to one GPU. These results are to be taken with a grain of salt but are really encouraging.
For the next steps, a porting strategy for both codes will be implemented (depending on the OpenMP 5 support ) and discussions are underway with CINES and other partners so as to offer the best experience to both code's communities on AdAstra at its release.