Featured Body   960x500

ATS-5, the fifth Advanced Technology System (ATS) in the Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) program, will be critical to the success of these NNSA missions. ATS-5 will support current and future simulation codes and will tackle some of the largest-scale 3D simulation workloads in support of the stockpile stewardship mission. These large-scale simulations are known as “hero”-class simulations, and ATS-5 will reduce these hero simulations’ time-to-completion from months to days. Additionally, ATS-5 will provide the ability to run multiple of these hero-class simulations simultaneously. Vastly reduced time-to-solutions, combined with the ability to run multiple large-scale simulations, will dramatically improve NNSA’s ability and agility to manage the stockpile.

In 2027, Crossroads (ATS-3) will be nearing the end of its useful lifetime. ATS‑5 will replace Crossroads and will be the first NNSA HPC system in the post-exascale era providing a large portion of the simulation resources for the NNSA ASC tri-lab community of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), and Sandia National Laboratories (SNL). 

ATS‑5 will support a diverse set of applications spanning the analysis of manufacturing defects, changing material properties as a result of the use of new materials with both current and new manufacturing techniques, the analysis of the impact of combined environments, aging defects, and potentially alternate delivery vehicles. New and emerging workloads, including digital engineering and machine learning (ML), will also be enabled by ATS‑5.

Numerous architectural advancements in ATS‑5 system design will support the NNSA Office of Defense Programs mission needs. ATS-5 will be designed with the following architectural advancements and major project goals: 

  • Overcoming the memory wall—continued memory bandwidth performance improvements for tri-lab applications
  • Improved efficiency—programmer productivity, energy usage, and increased processor utilization
  • Architectural diversity—ensuring that the high-performance computing ecosystem remains vibrant with multiple advanced technology solutions
  • Time-to-solution—advancing strong scaling improvements to tackle the most pressing challenge of major improvements in time-to-solution for NNSA’s largest and most complex stockpile simulations

Achieving these goals will enable weapons designers, analysts, and computational scientists to make more routine use of today’s hero-class simulations in support of the stockpile stewardship certification and assessments to ensure that the Nation’s nuclear stockpile is safe, secure, and reliable.

ATS-5 Timeline

  • Draft Technical Specification - September 2023
  • RFP release - March 2024
  • Source selection - July 2024
  • Award NRE/Build contract - May 2025
  • System Delivery - late 2026/early 2027
  • Acceptance - August/September 2027

 

Triad National Security, LLC (Triad) which manages and operates Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), is planning to release a Request for Proposal (RFP) for NNSA’s next generation Advanced Technology System (ATS), ATS-5, to be delivered in the 2027 time frame.  

On September 28, 2023, LANL posted the draft Technical Requirements document (current version 1.0) for the planned ATS-5 solicitation. Draft technical documents are posted in the links below and may be subject to change.

All comments, questions, etc. should be sent to ats5-rfp-comments@lanl.gov. Any information provided by industry to Triad is strictly voluntary and the information obtained from responses to this notice may be used in the development of an acquisition strategy and future solicitation.

Assuring that real applications perform efficiently on ATS-5 is key to their success. A suite of benchmarks have been developed for Request For Proposal (RFP) response evaluation and system acceptance. These codes are representative of the workloads of the NNSA laboratories.

The benchmarks contained within this site represent a pre-RFP draft state. Over the next few months the benchmarks will change somewhat. While we expect most of the changes will be additions and modifications it is possible that we will remove benchmarks prior to RFP.

To use these benchmarks, please refer to the ATS-5 benchmark documentation as well as the benchmark code repository.

Benchmark changes from Crossroads

The key differences from Crossroads benchmarks and ATS-5 benchmarks are as summarized below:

Crossroads

ATS-5

Notes

Few GPU-ready benchmarks

All proxy benchmarks have
GPU implementations.
 
System level performance metric:
Scalable System Improvement
geometric mean of app FOMs.
Use of single node benchmarks
for RFP.
Multi-node benchmarking for
system acceptance based on
RFP benchmarks, negotiated
with vendor as part of SOW.
Attempting to limit multi-node
benchmarking for RFP
to communication (MPI), and
IO (IOR). Expect responses to
include multiple node
configurations and ability to
compose them to meet our needs
in a codesign partnership.
Will use scaled single node
improvement to assess proposals
(along with other factors) and
SSI for acceptance.
Mini-Apps + full scale apps
some of which were export
controlled.
Mini-apps only - all open
source.
 

No Machine Learning.

ML training and inference
included.
Focuses on material science
workloads of relevance.

Benchmark Overview

Benchmark

Description

Language

Parallelism

Branson

Implicit Monte Carlo transport

C++

MPI + Cuda/HIP

AMG2023

AMG solver of sparse matrices
using Hypre

C

MPI+CUDA/HIP/SYCL
OpenMP on CPU

MiniEM

Electro-Magnetics solver

C++

MPI+Kokkos

MLMD

ML Training of interatomic
potential model using HIPYNN
on VASP Simulation data.
ML inference using LAMMPS,
Kokkos, and HIPYNN trained
interatomic potential model.

Python, C++, C

MPI+Cuda/HIP

Parthenon-VIBE

Block structured AMR proxy using
the Parthenon framework.

C++

MPI+Kokkos

Sparta

Direct Simulation Monte Carlo

C++

MPI+Kokkos

UMT

Deterministic (Sn) transport

Fortran

MPI+OpenMP and
OpenMP Offload

Microbenchmark Overview

Benchmark

Description

Language

Parallelism

Multi-node

Stream

Streaming memory bandwidth test

C/Fortran

OpenMP

No

Spatter

Sparse memory bandwidth test
driven by application memory
access patterns.

C++

MPI+OpenMP/
CUDA/OpenCL

No

OSU MPI +
Sandia SMB
message rate

MPI Performance Benchmarks

C++

MPI

Yes

DGEMM

Single node floating-point
performance on matrix multiply.

C/Fortran

Various

No

DAXPY

Single node floating-point
performance of a scaled vector
plus a vector.

C/Fortran

Various

No

IOR

Performance testing of parallel
file system using various
interfaces and access patterns.

C

MPI

No

mdtest

Metadata benchmark that performs
open/stat/close operations on
files and directories.

C

MPI

Yes