Urgent computing is prioritized and immediate access on supercomputers and grids for emergency computations such as severe weather prediction during matters of immediate concern.[1][2]
Applications that provide decision makers with information during critical emergencies cannot waste time waiting in job queues and need access to computational resources as soon as possible.[3] Systems for urgent computing commonly use dedicated resources to ensure immediate and dedicated access to urgent computations. However, recent studies have shown the possibility of using shared resources to make urgent computing more economical.[4]
References
edit- ^ Spruce; Special Priority and Urgent Computing Environment[unreliable source?] spruce.teragrid.org
- ^ Beckman, Pete (March 2008). "Urgent Computing: Exploring Supercomputing's New Role". CTWatch Quarterly. 4 (1).
- ^ Cope, Jason M (2009). Data management for urgent computing environments (Thesis). OCLC 650213207. ProQuest 304873520.[page needed]
- ^ Agung, Mulya; Watanabe, Yuta; Weber, Henning; Egawa, Ryusuke; Takizawa, Hiroyuki (2021). "Preemptive Parallel Job Scheduling for Heterogeneous Systems Supporting Urgent Computing". IEEE Access. 9: 17557–17571. Bibcode:2021IEEEA...917557A. doi:10.1109/access.2021.3053162.