A 2,000-processor Intel Itanium 2 supercomputer at the U.S. Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Labs (PNNL) has edged out Lawrence Livermore National Lab's Intel Xeon-based Multiprogrammatic Capability Cluster for the title of world's fastest Linux supercomputer, according to PNNL.
PNNL on Tuesday announced that it had completed an upgrade of the 1,400 1.0GHz Itanium 2 McKinley processors in its William W. Wiley Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory supercomputer in Richland, Washington, boosting the system's peak performance from 6.2 trillion floating point operations per second (T FLOPS) to 11.8T FLOPS. The new processors run at 1.5GHz and are based on Intel Corp.'s follow-up to its McKinley design, which is called Madison.
"It's about 11,800 times faster than the average personal computer," said PNNL Molecular Science Computing Facility's manager of computer operations, Scott Studham. "Most computers have between 250MB and 1GB of memory. This one has 7,000GB of memory."
Linux has emerged in the last few years as an increasingly popular operating system for the highly technical supercomputer market. In the last month, Dell Inc. announced plans to build a 17.7T FLOPS Xeon system for the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, and IBM Corp., Fujitsu Ltd., and Cray Inc. all are building Linux supercomputers in the 11T FLOPS to 40T FLOPS range.
PNNL's upgrade process took just over a month, with a team of 10 Hewlett-Packard Co. employees on site unpacking and installing about 250 Madison microprocessors into the Labs' McKinley-based rx2600 machines each week. "On a weekly basis, a semi truck with processors would show up," said Studham, who claims to have developed more than a passing familiarity with the CPU upgrade process. "I can personally tell you that there are four screws required to take out an Itanium 2 CPU," he said.
The 3,000-square-foot, $24.5 million system will be used for a variety of computationally intensive tasks at the labs, such as studying basic chemistry and biology, and modeling how leaked radioactive material might move underground.
For this kind of science, the Itanium 2's floating point performance of 6 billion operations per second made it a better fit than AMD's rival Opteron processor, Studham said. "It was important for us to build out of the fastest processor we could get," he said. He estimated the labs would have needed 1,000 more processors to achieve the same level of floating point performance with an Opteron-based supercomputer.
This whitepaper explains the terminology and concepts behind Data Replication technologies and establishes some sizing rules through worked examples. Learn the new paradigm in disaster tolerance—protect data anywhere.
Download now »Server virtualization is a popular option for dealing with mounting datacenter costs. Another equally promising approach is the use of an Application Delivery Controller. Citrix NetScaler provides a low-cost way for organizations to reduce their server count and accrue cost savings from a reduction in space, cooling, power and personnel.
Download now »
The emergence of WLANs has created a new breed of security threats to enterprise networks.
Included in HP ProCurve WLAN solutions is security technology that alleviates threats from WLANs through:
* Monitoring wireless activity inside and out of the enterprise
* Classifying WLAN transmissions into harmful and harmless
* Preventing transmissions that pose a security threat to the enterprise network
* Locating participating devices for physical remediation
Effectively address data protection challenges, implementing solutions that help store and protect businesscritical data while cutting costs and improving efficiency and reliability.
Download now »
Sign up to receive Platforms Resource Alerts
