Webinar: An Introduction to HDF5 in HPC Environments Supporting Materials
A slide deck and recording for the June 5, 2020 webinar, “An Introduction to HDF5 in HPC Environments.”
A slide deck and recording for the June 5, 2020 webinar, “An Introduction to HDF5 in HPC Environments.”
HDFView 3.1.1 is now available from the HDFView Download page.
Thank you to our co-participants at OpenIO for allowing us to work with you to create this webinar on object storage. If you’re interested in the webinar recording or slide deck, you can access them here: https://www.openio.io/blog/webinar-switch-to-object-storage.
Many organizations have petabytes of HDF5 data stored on premise NAS systems, and while object storage systems are generally more cost effective than NAS, applications written on POSIX storage won’t “just work” with object storage. The HDF Group has taken the pain and expense out of this problem by developing open source libraries and services to enable HDF5 applications to transparently use object storage (on prem or in the cloud)—no modifications needed. Join us in this webinar to learn more.
John Readey, senior architect at The HDF Group recently worked with OpenIO to integrate the Highly Scalable Data Service (HSDS) with OpenIO’s storage. (You can read more about this integration here.) John will be presenting, along with Guillaume Delaporte, Co-founder and VP Pre-Sales at OpenIO, to discuss the technical and business implications of moving to object storage.
Here is the recording, slide deck, and Q&A format for the presentation on moving to HDF5 1.12.
Dear HDF Community, Nothing is more important than the need to protect the health and safety of those most vulnerable to COVID-19. The HDF Group is taking steps to minimize health risks to our teammates and their families, our clients, and our communities by closing our Champaign office and asking all employees to work remotely.
In this webinar we’ll talk about the API changes in HDF5 1.12.0 release, and how to move existing applications to this release.
Version 2.2.5 of the h4toh5 Conversion Library and Tools is now available from the HDF Support Portal’s Download h4h5tools page and directly from h4h5tools+2.2.5.
We are very pleased to announce the release of HDF5 1.12.0, which can now be obtained from the HDF5 Download page.