TotalView(R) Offers Debugging Support for Intel(R) Xeon Phi(TM) Coprocessor

BOULDER, CO--(Marketwired - Jun 12, 2013) - Rogue Wave Software, the largest independent provider of cross-platform software development tools and embedded components for the next generation of HPC applications, announced the release of its leading parallel debugger, TotalView® 8.12. This version of TotalView offers official support for the Intel® Xeon Phi™ coprocessor, Cray® XC30™ series supercomputers, and Apple® OS X Lion and Mountain Lion platforms. The release of TotalView 8.12 is part of Rogue Wave's commitment to improve developer productivity on advanced architectures.

"Intel and Rogue Wave have a long history of working together to ensure customer benefit from the combination of Intel technologies with Rogue Wave software. This continues with our work together on tools specifically optimized for the Intel Xeon Phi," stated James Reinders, Director of Parallel Programming at Intel. "Being known as an intuitive and easy-to-use debugger, TotalView works to help developers to quickly and confidently take advantage of the massive parallelism available on the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor."

TotalView 8.12 gives developers the ability to view, control, and debug codes running on both the host processor and the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor. This version of TotalView supports host-side applications using the Intel offload directives (LEO) and applications running natively on the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor. Users can debug scalable MPI applications that are launched from the host environment, but run as native on one or more Intel Xeon Phi coprocessors on a server or across the nodes of an enabled cluster.

The early-access version of TotalView 8.12 has already been deployed and successfully used at a number of strategic customer sites over the past six months, including the National Institute for Computational Sciences (NICS) and Sandia National Laboratories. The experience of these sites was that the porting process was fairly simple due to the similar architecture between the Intel Xeon processor and the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor; however, the interesting challenge was optimizing the code to fully leverage the many cores of the advanced coprocessor. Within the framework of the Beacon Project, teams from the NICS at the University of Tennessee used the early-access version to assist in the optimization process for a number of different codes, including the kinetic model of computational fluid dynamics and the Gyro tokamak plasma simulation. By using TotalView, the teams succeeded in improving their applications' speed and performance on the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor. At Sandia National Laboratories, teams have been testing the early-access version of TotalView 8.12 and found the asynchronous thread control to be a crucial functionality in optimizing code for the Intel Xeon Phi coprocessor.