Parallel Programming with Python

NA

Online

April 03 - 06, 2023

9:00 - 13:00 CEST

Instructors: Johan Hidding, Jaro Camphuijsen

Helpers: Laura Ootes, Flavio Hafner

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General Information

The eScience Center offers a range of free workshops and training courses, open to all researchers affiliated with Dutch research organizations. We organize workshops covering digital skills needed to put reproducible research into practice. These include online collaboration, reproducible code and good programming practices. We also offer more advanced workshops such as GPU Programming, Parallel Programming and Deep Learning.

Python is one of most widely used languages to do scientific data analysis, visualization, and even modelling and simulation. The popularity of Python is mainly due to the two pillars of a friendly syntax together with the availability of many high-quality libraries. The flexibility that Python offers comes with a few downsides though: code typically doesn’t perform as fast as lower-level implementations in C/C++ or Fortran, and it is not trivial to parallelize Python code to work efficiently on many-core architectures. This workshop addresses both these issues, with an emphasis on being able to run Python code efficiently (in parallel) on multiple cores.

We’ll start with learning to recognize problems that are suitable for parallel processing, looking at dependency diagrams and kitchen recipes. From then on, the workshop is highly interactive, diving straight into the first parallel programs. This workshop teaches the principles of parallel programming in Python using Dask, Numba and asyncio. More importantly, we try to give insight in how these different methods perform and when they should be used.

Who: 

The participant should be:

  • familiar with basic Python: control flow, functions, NumPy
  • comfortable working in Jupyter

Recommended:

  • understand how NumPy and/or Pandas work

Where: This training will take place online. The instructors will provide you with the information you will need to connect to this meeting.

When: April 03 - 06, 2023, 9:00 - 13:00 CEST.

Requirements: Participants must have access to a computer with a Mac, Linux, or Windows operating system (not a tablet, Chromebook, etc.) that they have administrative privileges on. They should have a few specific software packages installed (listed below).

Accessibility: We are dedicated to providing a positive and accessible learning environment for all. Please notify the instructors in advance of the workshop if you require any accommodations or if there is anything we can do to make this workshop more accessible to you.

Contact: Please email or training@esciencecenter.nl for more information.


Code of Conduct

Participants are expected to follow these guidelines:

Syllabus

Schedule

Day 1

09:00 Welcome and icebreaker
09:15 Introduction
10:30 Break
10:45 Measuring performance
12:00 Coffee break
12:15 Recap and Computing Pi
12:45 Wrap-up
13:00 END

Day 2

09:00 Welcome,icebreaker and recap
09:15 Computing Pi
10:30 Coffee break
10:45 Using Dask Array
12:00 Tea break
12:15 Using Numba
12:45 Wrap-up
13:00 END

Day 3

09:00 Welcome, icebreaker and recap
09:15 Threads and processes
10:30 Coffee break
10:45 Delayed evaluation
12:00 Tea break
12:15 Data flow patterns
12:45 Wrap-up
13:00 END

Day 4

09:00 Welcome, icebreaker and recap
09:15 Introduction to coroutines and asyncio
10:45 Coffee break
11:00 Computing fractals in parallel
12:00 Tea break
12:15 Presentations of group work
12:45 Post-workshop Survey
13:00 END

Setup

To participate in this workshop, you will need access to software as described below. In addition, you will need an up-to-date web browser.

We maintain a list of common issues that occur during installation as a reference for instructors that may be useful on the Configuration Problems and Solutions wiki page.

Software setup

Requirements

To follow along with the workshop, you need to prepare an environment. Clone the workshop repository that we prepared:

git clone https://github.com/esciencecenter-digital-skills/parallel-python-workshop.git
cd parallel-python-workshop

You may prepare the environment either in conda or using vanilla Python with poetry.

For most users we recommend that you use conda to install the requirements for the workshop.

conda env create -f environment.yml
conda activate parallel-python
pytest

If the tests pass, you’re all good! Otherwise, please contact us before the workshop.

Poetry

Only follow these instructions if you’re on Linux or Mac and don’t have conda installed. Make sure that you have Python 3.9 installed.

If you’ve never used poetry before, check it out!

pip install --user poetry
poetry install
poetry run pytest

Install the videoconferencing client

If you haven't used Zoom before, go to the official website to download and install the Zoom client for your computer.

Set up your workspace

Like other Carpentries workshops, you will be learning by "coding along" with the Instructors. To do this, you will need to have both the window for the tool you will be learning about (a terminal, RStudio, your web browser, etc..) and the window for the Zoom video conference client open. In order to see both at once, we recommend using one of the following set up options:

This blog post includes detailed information on how to set up your screen to follow along during the workshop.