ASHPC25

Europe/Ljubljana
Rimske Terme, Slovenia

Rimske Terme, Slovenia

Description

      

 

Austrian-Slovenian HPC Meeting 2025 – ASHPC25

ASHPC25 will take place at Rimske Terme in Slovenia, 19–22 May 2025, it will start with a welcome dinner on 19 May 2025, the conference program will start at 09:00 on 20 May 2025.

Continuing the tradition of the annual Austrian HPC Meetings (2015–2020) and the Austrian-Slovenian HPC Meetings (2021–2024), bringing together users and providers of large-scale computing resources for both academic and non-academic research and development. Keynote speakers will share insights into the latest developments in distributed machine-learning algorithms, computational chemistry, quantum computing, and the challenges posed by climate and weather simulations. 

ASHPC25 focuses on various aspects of High-Performance Computing (HPC) and provides a great opportunity to discuss HPC-related topics and present your latest results. It will also provide an overview and update on the rapidly improving HPC landscape available to European researchers.

 

 

On Monday, May 19, at 3:00 pm the Central European Regional Group Meeting will take place, which is open only to NCC/EuroCC 2 staff. It will be followed at 5:00 PM by the panel "EuroHPC ecosystem: How to get access for HPC and AI", which is open to all participants

Registration for the event is closed, but you can still register for online attendance. Please register here.

The event will take place at Rimske Terme (Toplice 10, 3272 Rimske Toplice, Slovenia). If you are arriving by train, we organize a shuttle service from the train station in Laško. The price is 10 EUR per car, which will be at your own expense.
To request a pickup, please fill out this short form by Thursday, May 15, 2025, at 1:00 PM.

Parking is available on site in the hotel garage for all registered participants.

 

Conference Timetable 

Registration
ASHPC25 (19–22 May 2025)
    • 14:00
      Get Together & Coffee
    • Central European Regional Group Meeting (for NCC / EuroCC 2 staff only)
    • EuroHPC ecosystem: How to get access for HPC and AI (open to all)
      Convener: Claudia Blaas-Schenner (VSC Research Center, TU Wien)
      • 1
        EuroHPC: Systems and Access
        Speaker: Philipp Gschwandtner (Research Center HPC, Department of Computer Science, University of Innsbruck, Austria)
      • 2
        AI Factory: A Comparative Guide to Access AI Factory's Computing Power
        Speaker: Žiga Zebec (IZUM – Institute of Information Science, Slovenia)
      • 3
        Q & A – How to get access for HPC and AI
        Speaker: Claudia Blaas-Schenner, Philipp Gschwandtner, and Žiga Zebec
    • 18:00
      Registration
    • 19:00
      Dinner
    • Welcome by the Program and Organizing Chairs
    • Keynote: Erwin Laure
      • 4
        HPC & AI - Competition or Collaboration

        Erwin Laure is the Director of the Max Planck Computing and Data Facility (MPCDF) of the MPG in Garching, Germany and Honorary Professor at the Technical University of Munich. Before joining MPG he was Professor for High Performance Computing at KTH Stockholm and Director of the PDC Center for High Performance Computing there. He holds a PhD from the University of Vienna and has more than 25 years years of experience in high performance computing, was a member of the EuroHPC Infrastructure Advisory Group, and was involved in major European exascale projects (e.g. the BioExcel Centre of Excellence for Biomolecular Simulations). His research interests include programming environments, languages, compilers and runtime systems for parallel and distributed computing, with a focus on exascale computing.

        Speaker: Erwin Laure (Technical University of Munich (TUM) / Max Planck Computing and Data Facility (MPCDF), Garching, Germany)
    • Plenary: Block 1
      • 5
        Slovenian Genomic Data Infrastructure
        Speaker: Aleš Čep (University Of Maribor, Slovenia)
      • 6
        atropy: a dynamical low-rank solver for the chemical master equation
        Speaker: Julian Mangott (Universität Innsbruck)
      • 7
        Sparse matrix operations on RISC-V vector architecture
        Speaker: Ratko Pilipović
    • 10:45
      Coffee Break
    • Plenary: Block 2
      • 8
        HPC Info: Enhanced Resource Tracking for SLURM Users and Administrators
        Speaker: Dr Sebastian Sitkiewicz (Wroclaw Centre for Networking and Supercomputing (WCNS))
      • 9
        Strong Scaling Days: Testing massively parallel applications on VSC
        Speaker: Florian Goldenberg (TU Wien)
      • 10
        Flexible and compact high density modular data center
        Speaker: Matjaž Pančur (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Computer and Information Science)
      • 11
        Blurring the lines between compilation and runtime optimization in the DAPHNE open source software framework
        Speaker: Mark Dokter (EuroCC Austria)
      • 12
        Unveiling the Energy Cost of Parallel Performance Portability in C++
        Speaker: Dr Ruben Laso (Research Group for Scientific Computing, Faculty of Computer Science, University of Vienna)
    • 12:30
      Lunch
    • Keynote: Sam Hatfield
      • 13
        Exascale Numerical Weather Prediction at ECMWF

        For many decades now, the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) has spearheaded developments in global numerical weather prediction. The continued growth in forecast skill over the past few decades is due in large part to increases in the grid resolution of ECMWF’s Earth-systemnmodel, the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS). This increase has gone hand-in-hand with developments innhigh-performance computing, with new generations of supercomputer permitting higher model resolutionsnand complexity. Weather forecast skill is especially sensitive to the resolution of the atmospheric component, for which resolutions are approaching the so-called “storm-resolving” level, which indicates a grid spacing ofnlower than 10 kilometres. A step change in the fidelity of global atmospheric simulations is expected as thenmodel resolution approaches this “kilometre scale”, in particular for the representation of extreme weather events.
        However, recent developments in supercomputing present a barrier as we push towards these kilometre-scale simulations. The impetus for this new class of forecast system comes from the Destination Earth project, whose goals are to develop a series of Earth-system digital twins to aid in the prediction and mitigation of extreme weather events under a changing climate. In order to run this new class of Earth-system simulation efficiently, one must make effective use of accelerators, namely GPUs, and large communication networks.
        This talk will give an overview of activities at ECMWF towards the goal of running kilometre-scale Earth-system simulations on pre-exascale and exascale supercomputers. The talk will present lessons learned from earlier experiments on supercomputers such as Summit. I will concentrate in particular on the spectral transform library ecTrans which the IFS atmospheric component crucially depends on, and which neatly contains several key computation and communication paradigms. I will also explore the opportunities of the new breed of data-driven models, which are led by ECMWF’s AIFS machine learning model. These models rival traditional “physics-based” models such as the IFS, and are extremely cheap at inference time. The training of these models is a high-performance computing problem in its own right.

        Sam Hatfield is a Computational Scientist at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). He is closely involved in efforts to port the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS), a numerical weather prediction code with a long history, to modern GPU-equipped supercomputers. This will enable ECMWF to perform kilometer-scale global Earth system simulations to better capture extreme weather events, a key goal of the Destination Earth initiative. Sam focuses his efforts in particular on the spectral transform kernel, fulfilled by ECMWF’s numerical library ecTrans, which can dominate the overall wall time for the IFS.

        Speaker: Sam Hatfield (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), Reading, United Kingdom)
    • Plenary: Block 3
      • 14
        High clouds, high grid spacing to the rescue?
        Speaker: Blaž Gasparini (University of Vienna)
      • 15
        Using machine learning to distinguish km-scale climate models and observations on a regional scale
        Speaker: Maximilian Meindl (University of Vienna)
      • 16
        Strategies for faster deep learning-based modeling of global barystatic processes
        Speaker: Mostafa Kiani Shahvandi (Department of Meteorology and Geophysics, University of Vienna)
    • Lightning Talks: Poster presentations

      Presented posters:
      • Performance Evaluation of Parallel Approaches for 1D PIC Simulations on GPUs, Ivona Vasileska
      • AURELEO: Austrian Users at LEONARDO supercomputer, Luis Casillas
      • Integrating Linux with HTTP: Secure and Automated Workflows, Wiktor Nastał
      • FLEXWEB - A flexible particle dispersion model web interface, Michael Blaschek
      • Empowering Women in High Performance Computing: Activities of the Central European Chapter of Women in HPC, Marta Maj
      • Understanding and Addressing Evolving Training Needs in High-Performance Computing: Insights from the 2024 Training Services Survey, Karina Pešatová
      • Treating atomic photoionization with a modified time-dependent surface flux method, Andrej Mihelic
      • Influence of membrane composition on the signaling of the NKG2A/CD94/HLA-E complex investigated by all-atom simulations, Martin Ljubič
      • Optimization of Small Language Models (SLMs), Teo Prica
      • NCC Czechia: Sucess Stories, Tomas Karasek
      • ICON @ VSC: strong scaling tests with a global km-scale model of the atmosphere, Aiko Voigt
      • VSC's Software Stack Envisioned, Adam McCartney
      • Heterogeneous Exascale Particle-in-Cell, Stefan Costea
      • Kilometer-scale Climate Modeling of TRAPPIST-1e Using ICON-Sapphire: Advancing Exoplanet Habitability Studies, Zoé Lloret
      • Support Systems for National Advanced Computing Service, Emir Imamagić
      • Is the IPMI Exporter a Reliable Tool for Power Monitoring?, Victoria Bringmann
      • Predicting rates of conformational change of proteins from projected molecular dynamics simulations, Neli Sedej
      • FFplus: Driving SME and Startup Innovation by Unleasing the Potential of HPC and Generative AI, Tina Črnigoj Marc
      • EXCELLERAT CoE: The European Centre of Excellence for Engineering Applications, Tina Črnigoj Marc
      • European Master for HPC study programme, Tomas Kozubek
      • Scaling Differentiable Simulations in Cosmology to Multiple GPUs, Lukas Winkler

      *The order of posters is random and subject to change.

    • 16:00
      Coffee Break/Poster Exhibition
    • Roundtable: Achieving Gender Balance in HPC: Retention and Representation from the Central European Perspective

      While awareness of gender imbalance in High Performance Computing (HPC) has grown, systemic change remains slow, especially in the research domain. In Central Europe, women continue to be underrepresented in HPC research teams and leadership roles, and retention through career transitions—from early-stage researcher to senior expert—remains a critical challenge.

      This round table invites researchers from across the HPC community to come together for a candid, evidence-informed discussion about gender equity in our field. We will begin with a brief presentation of regional data illustrating the current landscape of women's employment in HPC research institutions, including findings from our member organizations. These insights aim to ground our conversation in lived realities and shared challenges.

      Rather than offering a top-down set of solutions, this session seeks to engage participants in a collaborative dialogue around bottom-up strategies that can be initiated within research teams, labs, and departments. Topics may include inclusive supervision and mentoring practices, team culture, institutional support gaps, and the role of peer networks. We especially welcome contributions that reflect practical experiences—what has worked, what hasn’t, and what we can try next.

      The session aims to empower researchers at all career stages to contribute to shaping more inclusive and resilient research environments in HPC.

    • VSC User Meeting VIP room

      VIP room

      Rimske Terme, Slovenia

    • 19:15
      Dinner
    • Keynote: Dan Alistarh
      • 17
        Compressing AI Models at GPT Scale

        A key barrier to the wide deployment of highly-accurate machine learning models, whether for language or vision, is their high computational and memory overhead. Although we possess the mathematical tools for highly-accurate compression of such models, these elegant techniques require second-order information about the model’s loss function, which is hard to even approximate efficiently at the scale of billion-parameter models.
        In this talk, I will describe our work on bridging this computational divide, which enables the accurate second-order pruning and quantization of models at truly massive scale. Compressed using our techniques, models with billions and even trillions of parameters can be executed efficiently on GPUs or even CPUs, with significant speedups, and negligible accuracy loss.

        Dan Alistarh is a Professor at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria, in Vienna. Previously, he was a Visiting Professor at MIT, a Researcher at Microsoft, and received his PhD from the EPFL. His research is on algorithms for efficient machine learning and high-performance computing, with a focus on scalable DNN inference and training, for which he was awarded an ERC Starting Grant in 2018. In his spare time, he works with the ML research team at Neural Magic, a startup based in Boston, on making compression faster, more accurate and accessible to practitioners.

        Speaker: Dan Alistarh (Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), Klosterneuburg, Austria)
    • Plenary: Block 4
      • 18
        Learning macroscopic equations of motion from particle-based simulations of a fluid
        Speaker: Matevž Jug (National Institute of Chemistry, Slovenia)
      • 19
        Optimizing Distributed Deep Learning Training by Tuning NCCL
        Speaker: Majid Salimi Beni (Faculty of Informatics, TU Wien)
      • 20
        ncclsee: A Lightweight Profiling Tool for NCCL
        Speaker: Ioannis Vardas (TU Wien)
      • 21
        HPC for Hybrid Threat Resilience: Insights from the HYBRIS Project
        Speakers: Siegfried Hoefinger, Simeon Harrison (TU Wien)
    • 10:45
      Coffee Break
    • Plenary: Block 5
      • 22
        Go wrapper for CUDA
        Speaker: Uroš Lotrič (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Computer and Information Science)
      • 23
        Benchmarking A40, L40S, H100 GPUs
        Speaker: Stefano Elefante (Institue of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA))
      • 24
        Accelerating Differential Evolution for High-Performance Computing: Leveraging Modern GPU Architectures and Mixed-Precision Arithmetic
        Speaker: Domen Verber (University of Maribor, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science)
      • 25
        Benchmarking the scalability and communication of the CholeskyQR2-IM algorithm on national and European HPC resources
        Speaker: Davor Davidović (Ruđer Bošković Institute)
      • 26
        GaMS meets Vega and Leonardo: Training Slovene LLMs
        Speaker: Domen Vreš (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Computer and Information Science)
    • 12:30
      Lunch
    • Keynote: Jan Šuntajs
      • 27
        High performance computing at the boundaries of quantum chaos

        This talk highlights the importance of high-performance computing (HPC) in addressing some of the fundamental challenges in nonequilibrium quantum physics, particularly in understanding ergodicity-breaking transitions (EBTs) in isolated interacting quantum systems. These transitions delineate ergodic systems (also referred to as quantum chaotic), which equilibrate over time, from nonergodic ones, which retain memory of their initial conditions indefinitely. As such, nonergodic systems hold promise for applications in quantum computing and memory devices, thus making their identification and characterization an area of intense interest for theoreticians and experimentalists alike.

        Jan Šuntajs is a physicist specializing in quantum many-body systems, quantum chaos, and ergodicity breaking transitions, with extensive experience in high-performance computing for numerical simulations. He received his PhD in
        in physics from at the University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics. His thesis, Nonequilibrium and statistical properties of isolated quantum many-body systems, earned him the Jožef Stefan Institute Golden Emblem Prize. Jan is currently employed at the Department of Theoretical Physics (F1) at the Jožef Stefan Institute and at the Laboratory for Internal Combustion Engines and Electromobility (LICeM) at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ljubljana. At LICeM, his research focuses on numerical simulations of batteries, particularly the coupling between chemical and elastomechanical properties, while his work at the Jožef Stefan Institute explores the boundaries of quantum chaos.

        Speaker: Jan Šuntajs (Institut "Jožef Stefan", Department of Theoretical Physics (F1))
    • Parallel session: Container Forum VIP room

      VIP room

      Rimske Terme, Slovenia

      • 28
        EPICURE and Containers, activities in EuroHPC VIP room

        VIP room

        Rimske Terme, Slovenia

        Speaker: Alja Prah (Josef Stefan Institute)
      • 29
        Confidential containers in multi-tenant HPC environments VIP room

        VIP room

        Rimske Terme, Slovenia

        Speaker: Barbara Krasovec (IJS)
      • 30
        Integrating Linux with HTTP: Secure and Automated Workflows VIP room

        VIP room

        Rimske Terme, Slovenia

        Speaker: Wiktor Nastał
      • 31
        Container Forum VIP room

        VIP room

        Rimske Terme, Slovenia

    • Plenary: Block 6
      • 32
        QUBO and quantum annealing: applications and perspectives
        Speaker: Mátyás Koniorczyk (HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre for Physics)
      • 33
        Hybrid Classical-Quantum Exact Solver for the QUBO Problem
        Speaker: Janez Povh (Rudolfovo - Science and technology center Novo mesto)
      • 34
        Bootcamp Performanceoriented Softwarengineering—Experiences from working with real-world problems and developers
        Speaker: Philipp Gschwandtner (University of Innsbruck)
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Parallel session: Container Forum VIP room

      VIP room

      Rimske Terme, Slovenia

      • 35
        HPC/AI dev-ops and administrator birds of feather meeting

        Broadening Skill Development in HPC Beyond End Users In the realm of HPC is important, as skill development efforts frequently center on end users, while overlooking critical groups such as DevOps engineers, system administrators, and security engineers. This BoF session will explore strategies for passing essential HPC expertise to these professionals. We will discuss methods for onboarding newcomers in these roles, including the options for training programs, targeted webinars, and the exchange of best practices for system administrators and security teams. By addressing gaps in skill development, we aim to enhance HPC reliability, security, and efficiency across all groups. We would like to enagege people in conversation on how we can redefine knowledge dissemination in HPC and create a more inclusive and resilient professional landscape.

    • Plenary: Block 7
      • 36
        MUSICA: Current situation and developments
        Speaker: Florian Goldenberg (TU Wien)
      • 37
        How to play MUSICA
        Speaker: Jan Zabloudil
      • 38
        When space runs out: A new central storage system for VSC
        Speaker: Markus Hickel (TU Wien)
    • AI Factories
      Convener: Claudia Blaas-Schenner (VSC Research Center, TU Wien)
      • 39
        CINECA infrastructure, from AI factory to quantum computers
        Speaker: Orlenys Troconis (CINECA, Italy)
      • 40
        AI Factory Austria AI:AT
        Speaker: Markus Stöhr (Advanced Computing Austria ACA GmbH and BOKU University, Austria)
      • 41
        SLAIF: Slovenian AI Factory (with a new EuroHPC AI optimized system)
        Speaker: Jan Jona Javoršek (Jožef Stefan Institute, Slovenia)
      • 42
        Roundtable AI Factories
    • 19:15
      Dinner
    • Keynote: Alessandro Laio
      • 43
        When data are big in the ”wrong” direction: identifying compact and informative distance measures in high-dimensional feature spaces

        Real-world data typically contain a large number of features that are often heterogeneous in nature, relevance, and also units of measure. When assessing the similarity between data points, one can build various distance measures using subsets of these features. Finding a small set of features that still retains sufficient information about the dataset is important for the successful application of many machine learning approaches. We introduce an approach that can assess the relative information retained when using two different distance measures, and determine if they are equivalent, independent, or if one is more informative than the other. This test can be used to identify the most informative distance measure out of a pool of candidate. We will discuss applications of this approach to feature selection in molecular modeling, to the analysis of the representations of deep neural networks, and to infer causality in high-dimensional dynamic processes and time series.

        Alessandro Laio is a Full Professor in the Department of Physics at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), Trieste, and consultant of the Condensed Matter and Statistical Physics group at ICTP. His recent research has focused on algorithmic developments in unsupervised learning, data clustering, metric learning and dimensionality reduction, while he has also made pioneering contributions to improving the ability of computer simulations to make predictions for complex systems. His name is usually associated with the groundbreaking algorithmic solutions for extracting essential features from complex data.

        Speaker: Alessandro Laio (Theoretical and Scientific Data Science Group, International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), Trieste, Italy)
    • Plenary: Block 8
      • 44
        AI-zyme: machine learning enhanced protein design
        Speaker: Žiga Zebec (IZUM)
      • 45
        Cell simulation: the ultimate way for developing better drugs
        Speaker: Drasko Tomic (Rudjer Boskovic Institute)
      • 46
        H2O adsorption at Co3O4 (111) surface from a DFT perspective
        Speaker: Alexander Genest
      • 47
        Open-boundary molecular dynamics of ultrasound using supramolecular water models
        Speaker: Maša Lah (National Institute of Chemistry)
    • 10:45
      Coffee Break
    • Plenary: Block 9
      • 48
        Enhancing AI Models in Local Language for IT Service Management
        Speaker: Mr András Dorn
      • 49
        Exploring the origin of enzyme catalysis by simulation methods
        Speaker: Jernej Stare (National Institute of Chemistry)
      • 50
        Efficient theoretically guided search for functional metallic thermoelectrics
        Speaker: Sergii Khmelevskyi (VSC Research Center, TU Wien)
      • 51
        Research Software Engineers (RSE) at the VSC Research Centre
        Speaker: Siegfried Hoefinger
    • Closing
    • 12:30
      Lunch