Spring Research Computing Bootcamp starts May 4

Spring Research Computing Bootcamp starts May 4! Popular Python and HPC workshops are back. All spring workshops will be held online and there is no cost to attend.

Are you unable to attend a workshop date but are interested in research computing resources? Check out our Research Computing page to see our list of services and to access video recordings from past bootcamps.

Research Computing Bootcamp Schedule

May 2023

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
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8
9:30 am–12:30 pm
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9 am–12 noon
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9–11 am
11
9 am–12 noon
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15
9:30 am–12 noon
16
9 am–12 noon
17
9:30 am–12 noon
18
9 am–12 noon
19
9:30 am–12 noon
22
23
9 am–12 noon
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25
9 am–12 noon
26
29
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31

June 2023

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
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2
5
6
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8
9
12
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16
19
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26
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See something you like? Register below! Please only sign up for a bootcamp if you are confident you can attend.


Register now! Introduction to the Digital Research Alliance of Canada and Bootcamp Overview 

Date: Thursday, May 4
Time: 10–11 am
Location: Online
Facilitator: John Simpson

The first 30 minutes of the workshop is a high-level overview of what is offered to researchers by the Digital Research Alliance of Canada ("the Alliance"), the workshops in the bootcamp series and how the bootcamps set researchers up to use the Alliance. The second 30 minutes of the workshop is open time for questions. Not sure which Bootcamp sessions to take? Wondering how your particular research project fits into the Alliance? This is an open space to ask these and similar questions.

 

Register now! Research Computing Network

Date: Friday, May 5
Time: 10–11 am
Location: Online
Facilitator: Dean Schieve

This 1-hour workshop will introduce you to the Research Computing Network, a new digital communities of interest platform for University of Alberta faculty, staff and student researchers. You can connect with campus researchers, discuss topics related to advanced research computing and share resources, tips and tricks.

 

Register now! HPC: Shell Basics

Date: Monday, May 8
Time: 9 am–12:30 pm
Location: Online
Facilitator: John Simpson

This 3.5-hour workshop will introduce you to the basic interface for using a High-Performance Computing (HPC) environment: the Linux Shell, a command line environment. You will learn how to login to a remote HPC machine and perform common tasks, including moving through directories, viewing files and moving files on and off the system. This is a version of the face-to-face workshop that we run regularly that has been truncated slightly to account for some inefficiencies of the online environment.

Participants will need a computer that has a strong internet connection to handle video streaming. They will also need software to access the HPC systems that will be used as part of the course. Instructions on installing such software will be shared with registrants a few days before the course.

 

Register now! HPC: Essentials

Date: Tuesday, May 9
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Kamil Marcinkowski

This is the second workshop in the series designed to move researchers from no previous experience using high performance computing (HPC) clusters towards a position of confidence and competence. This workshop focuses on the mechanics of submitting programs (aka “jobs”) to the clusters so that they can be scheduled and run.

Led by Kamil Marcinkowski, scheduling team lead for Compute Canada, this workshop will contain extra emphasis on interacting with the scheduler to ensure that your work is getting done rather than sitting in the queue. This workshop provides that background in a friendly, jargon-minimized, hands-on environment.

 

Register now! HPC: Scripting Basics

Date: Wednesday, May 10
Time: 9–11 am
Location: Online
Facilitator: John Simpson

In this 2 hour, direct follow-up to HPC:Shell we will spend additional time looking at writing scripts within the Linux Shell as part of automating tasks. You will learn more about writing and using scripts to get your work done, including how to write loops, and how to generalize your scripts by allowing them to take inputs directly from the command line. This workshop will not cover the mechanics of submitting work to the HPC Clusters via scripts but is instead an optional prepartory workshop for HPC: Essentials, which covers this.

Participants will need a computer that has a strong internet connection to handle video streaming. They will also need software to access the HPC systems that will be used as part of the course. Instructions on installing such software will be shared with registrants a few days before the course.

 

Register now! HPC: Parallelism

Date: Thursday, May 11
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Kamil Marcinkowski

Are you having a hard time understanding parallel computing and High Performance Computing (HPC)? Specially, all the terms such as: thread, process, job,vector processor, core, CUDA, MPI, and many more. This session will provide you with a map to understand parallel computing, a description of the terms and concepts and how they relate to each other. Like any good map, it will let you know which concepts and terms you need to know in greater detail, and how they relate to what you are trying to do. With this map in hand you will be in a better position to decide when and how to take advantage of the parallel computing architectures that are available to you.

This workshop will include a simple and practical live demonstration running and viewing different types of parallel programs/concepts on an HPC cluster.

 

Register now! HPC: Interactive Tuning & Debugging

Date: Friday, May 12
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Kamil Marcinkowski

Your research has gone beyond the capabilities of your laptop, and you're now getting started with the cluster. Now what? How do you figure out what resources your jobs need on the cluster? What do you do when things go wrong? This workshop will share secrets of interactive cluster usage so you can schedule work efficiently, learn how to fix problems when things go wrong, and use the system for interactive code development. High performance computing (HPC) clusters are composed of Linux machines, understanding and controlling work on a cluster is an extension of the skills in doing the same on a Linux machine.

You will learn how to debug by determining the amount of resources (memory, open files, disk IO, IOPS, and network traffic) a program uses. We will cover what these resources are, and how to identify and solve potential problems.

 

Register now! Introduction to Python

Date: Tuesday, May 16; Thursday, May 18; Tuesday, May 23; Thursday, May 25
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Chris Want

This is a 12-hour introductory online workshop (3 hours a day over 4 days) on using the Python programming language, with a particular focus on data analysis using the Pandas library and plotting. No previous programming experience assumed (this course starts with the absolute basics).

Either Python/Jupyter must be installed on your own computer, or a cloud based Jupyter environment can be used. If you do not have a version of Python and are not sure where to start, then consider following the instructions for your operating system here: https://ualberta-rcg.github.io/python-intro/setup/

Participants will need a computer that has a strong internet connection to handle video streaming.

 

Register now! Cloud Intro

Date: Monday, May 15
Time: 9:30 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Erming Pei

You may have already heard about the "cloud" or "cloud computing," or you may have seen this term everywhere. However, what is the nature of it? What's the difference between cloud computing and traditional computing models? How can we access and use a cloud in particular for research purposes?

The Cloud Intro course will clarify all of the above, starting with an overview of cloud computing including the evolution of HPC/ARC computer technologies, public and private clouds and the cloud deployed by the Digital Research Alliance of Canada (Alliance). This will be followed by an introduction to the national cloud sites, computing resources and different types of cloud storage such as volume, shared filesystem and object storage.

Finally, you will be guided on how to apply for/access those cloud resources as a pre-requisite of the following two sessions: Cloud Hands-on and Cloud Advanced.

 

Register now! Cloud Hands-on

Date: Wednesday, May 17
Time: 9:30 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Erming Pei

In this session, you will be guided step by step on how to use the Alliance cloud system including launching your own instances or virtual machines, setting up the environment such as network, authentication, storage volumes, etc. You will also be shown how to conveniently access various research computing software repositories on the basis of CVMFS that is a potent and convenient research software distribution system used around the world.

Attendees are strongly recommended to take the Cloud Intro session and to register for an account with the Digital Research Alliance of Canada before attending this session. If you haven't, you can still join us using the pre-set guest user credentials.

 

Register now! Cloud Advanced

Date: Friday, May 19
Time: 9:30 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Erming Pei

The Cloud Advanced session aims to accommodate different topics of advanced cloud technologies and applications. Containerization is a hot topic in cloud computing. The target of this talk is to present a broad overview of containerization and related technologies. It's intended to lead into future sessions that will go deeper into each specific containerization subject.

We will start by answering the question "What is a container?", explaining the the benefits of using containers and comparing containers and virtual machines. Docker, the most popular containerization tool, will be introduced subsquently, with a discussion of concepts, basic operations and how to interact with image repositories.

Two other tools for implementing containerization in specific scenarios (Singularity and Kubernetes) will also be briefly introduced. Time permitting, we will demonstrate examples of using Singularity and Kubernetes.

 

Register now! Intermediate Python: Introduction to Machine Learning

Date: Monday, June 5; Wednesday, June 7; Friday, June 9
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Chris Want

This hands-on workshop (three half-days) will introduce students to central concepts in machine learning, and provide an introduction to tools for doing predictive data science with Python. It includes an introduction to supervised learning (classification and regression), unsupervised learning (clustering), and basic neural networks.

Students should know some Python and Pandas (e.g. via the Introduction to Python course), but no previous experience with machine learning is required.

If you do not have a version of Python installed on your computer and are not sure where to start, you can use a cloud-based Jupyter notebook platform (like Google Colab), or consider following the instructions for your operating system here: https://ualberta-rcg.github.io/python-intro/setup/

 

Register now! Intermediate Python: Plotting

Date: Wednesday, June 14
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Chris Want

This half-day session will look at the Plotly library for creating interactive plots. Students should know some Python and Pandas (e.g. via the Introduction to Python course).

If you do not have a version of Python installed on your computer and are not sure where to start, you can use a cloud-based Jupyter notebook platform (like Google Colab), or consider following the instructions for your operating system here: https://ualberta-rcg.github.io/python-intro/setup/

 

Register now! Intermediate Python: Parallelism

Date: Wednesday, June 21
Time: 9 am–12 noon
Location: Online
Facilitator: Chris Want

This half-day session will focus on writing parallel programs with Python (via the Dask library). Students should know some Python and Pandas (e.g., via the Introduction to Python course).

If you do not have a version of Python installed on your computer and are not sure where to start, you can use a cloud-based Jupyter notebook platform (like Google Colab), or consider following the instructions for your operating system here: https://ualberta-rcg.github.io/python-intro/setup/

 

 

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