The 2018 SPEC Presidential Award Winner
Kalyan Kumaran
Argonne National Laboratory
A turn for the best
Call it fate, call it destiny, call it happenstance. Sometimes a
career takes an unexpected turn that benefits a large group of people,
including the individual for whom it occurs. In the case of Kalyan
Kumaran, the aerospace industry's loss is the high-performance
community's gain.
Kumar, as he is known, is the 2018 recipient of SPEC's highest honor,
the Presidential Award. He received the award for his contributions to
SPEC as chair of the High-Performance Group (SPEC/HPG) for more than 15
years. He also served on the SPEC CPU committee and was elected to the
SPEC Board of Directors.
Coming out of Iowa State University with a PhD in engineering, Kumar
thought he was destined for a job in computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
for NASA Ames. But in reaction to a market shift, he transitioned to
computer science and ended up at SGI. It has proven to be a fortunate
development for SPEC.
Early contributions to CPU and HPG
In the mid-90s Kumar became SGI's representative to the SPEC CPU
committee, submitting SGI's results for SPEC CPU2000 and developing
more than a dozen floating point benchmarks for the SPEC CPU2006 suite.
He began working with SPEC/HPG during the latter stages of development
for SPEC HPC2002 and was elected chair in 2002. With few members in the
early days, SPEC/HPG would piggy-back on the meetings of the Fortran
standards committee, taking over a meeting room on Sunday after everybody
else had left for home.
"We'd be given the meeting room free of cost, bring our own projector,
and work on code, connecting to the hotel's router. If one person was using
a VPN connection, the rest of us would have to wait for our turn."
A SPECtacular leader
During his time as HPG chair, Kumar expanded participation in the benchmark
development process by bringing universities and major research labs into the
fold, creating a dynamic team of academics, researchers and vendor engineers
from around the world.
All three current HPG benchmarks for modern HPC systems — SPEC MPI2007,
SPEC OMP2012 and SPEC ACCEL — were developed under Kumar's leadership. He
also spearheaded efforts to make power measurement part of all current SPEC/HPG
benchmarks. For these contributions, he received four SPECtacular Awards.
In all of his many roles, Kumar could be relied upon to build consensus and
lead by example. He could also be counted on for pointed suggestions and pithy
comments that brought much-needed humor to potentially tense situations.
Calling for increased participation
Kumar applauds the decision by SPEC/HPG to make its benchmarks free of charge
to qualified non-commercial organizations. He sees it as a key step to expanding
the use of high-quality benchmarks in research and increasing participation in
the development process.
"SPEC needs to have more people actively involved and contributing in
order to generate new ideas and continually evolve its benchmarks and tools."
The value of support and friendship
Like all those working with SPEC, Kumar realizes the support of his employers
over the years -- SGI, VMware and Argonne National Laboratory — made it possible
for him to volunteer so much time to SPEC.
"All of us in SPEC know that this isn't possible without our employers
contributing funding and talent to develop these benchmarks, bring them to the
community, and continually improve them. I'm grateful for the opportunities my
employers have given me."
While proud of HPG's technical achievements, some of Kumar's best memories
are the people he worked beside in countless benchathons and planning meetings.
"Many of us were competitors, but we were a closely knit group dedicated
to the common cause of making new benchmarks that were relevant and sustainable.
We will be friends forever."