What makes PSIP suitable for the Exascale Computing Project?
Originally published at BSSw.io
The Exascale Computing Project (ECP) focuses on the development of a highly capable exascale ecosystem. With hundreds of people and many code projects of varying sizes involved in ECP, what is the path for continued improvements to software sustainability and quality both within and across ensembles of interdependent codes and teams?
Resource information | Details |
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Podcast title | Productivity and Sustainability Improvement Planning (PSIP) for ECP software |
Presenters | Elaine Raybourn |
Web links | Podcast link at Exascaleproject.org |
This interview podcast of Elaine Raybourn from the IDEAS-ECP team gives an excellent overview of the Productivity and Sustainability Improvement Planning (PSIP) process and explains how it is beneficial for the Exascale Computing Project (ECP) software and application teams.
Productivity and Sustainability Improvement Planning (PSIP) is a lightweight, iterative workflow that allows software development teams to identify development bottlenecks and track progress to overcome them.
The ECP project has over 1000 researchers and over 100 software project teams. Focusing on how to improve software sustainability and team productivity, PSIP brings software development activities together and enables partnerships and the adoption of best practices across aggregate teams.
Discover the motivations behind PSIPs, how to incorporate PSIPs into your research project and success stories about teams that have incorporated PSIP into their routine development processes, through this podcast!
Contributed by Rinku Gupta
For more resources on PSIP, please refer to the following articles on the BSSw.io site: