ETH: An Architecture for Exploring the Design Space of In-situ Scientific Visualization

2020 
As high-performance computing (HPC) moves towards the exascale era, large-scale scientific simulations are generating enormous datasets. Many techniques (e.g., in-situ methods, data sampling, and compression) have been proposed to help visualize these large datasets under various constraints such as storage, power, and energy. However, evaluating these techniques and understanding the trade-offs (e.g., performance, efficiency, and quality) remains a challenging task.To enable exploration of the design space across such trade-offs, we propose the Exploration Test Harness (ETH), an architecture for the early-stage exploration of visualization and rendering approaches, job layout, and visualization pipelines. ETH covers a broader parameter space than current large-scale visualization applications such as ParaView and VisIt. It also promotes the study of simulation-visualization coupling strategies through a data-centric approach, rather than requiring coupling with a specific scientific simulation code. Furthermore, with experimentation on an extensively instrumented supercomputer, we study more metrics of interest than was previously possible. Importantly, ETH will help to answer important what-if scenarios and trade-off questions in the early stages of pipeline development, helping scientists to make informed choices about how to best couple a simulation code with visualization at extreme scale.
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