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November 15th, 2007

NASA gets SGI 2048-core Itanium 2 supercomputer

Posted by George Ou @ 5:17 am

Categories: Hardware, Intel, News, Processors, Servers, Supercomputing

Tags: SGI Altix, Processor, NASA, Supercomputer, Intel Itanium, Intel Itanium 2, Silicon Graphics Inc., SPECint_rate2006, SPECfp_rate2006, UNIX

I had a chance to speak with NASA and SGI at the SC07 supercomputing convention in Reno this week where I saw one of the biggest super computers in the world.  Pictured left is a 1024-core version of the Altix 4700 and NASA just bought one with twice as many processors (1024 dual-core Itanium 2 processors) based on the Montecito variant of Intel’s Itanium 2 processor and 4 Terabytes of RAM.

This massive supercomputer is the most powerful single node computer in the world (based on SPECint_rate2006 and SPECfp_rate2006 database) and it has one of the largest single system memory pool in the world.  For some applications that simply can’t be effectively broken down in to smaller tasks that a cluster can handle using smaller nodes because of excessive communications overhead, this is really the only system that can crunch those hard problems.

To give you some idea how powerful this system is, a 256-core version of the SGI Altix 4700 has a SPECfp_rate2006 score of 3507 and a SPECint_rate2006 score of 2970.  The biggest 16-core Intel X7350 2.93 GHz server scores 119 on SPECfp_rate2006 and 214 on SPECint_rate2006.  The biggest 16-core AMD Barcelona server has a SPECfp_rate2006 score of 136 and a SPECint_rate2006 score of 160.  A 16-core IBM Power6 has a SPECfp_rate2006 score of 428 and a SPECint_rate2006 score of 478 though the latest 32-core version probably has double that performance.  But even the Power6 is dwarfed by the 256-core SGI machine let alone what a 2048-core version can do.

Of course there are plenty of jobs that do break down nicely for clusters and plenty of jobs that don’t need that much single-node memory.  That’s why NASA also purchased an Altix “ice” 8200 cluster using 16 of the racks pictured left.  Each one of these racks contains 64 dual-processor Intel XEON x86/x64 servers and 16 of these make a 1024 processor cluster with 4096 XEON CPU cores.

The Altix 8200 rack includes the 20 gbps InfiniBand switches on the sides for the cluster interconnect and the racks can be chained together with InfiniBand.  NASA has for the most part used very large shared memory systems like the Altix 4700 above but they’ve just started buying the clustered systems.

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George Ou is Technical Director of ZDNet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 51 Talkback(s)
Hey it is just as funny to bomb the mock "hick"! (NT)
nt laugh (Read the rest)
Posted by: JCitizen Posted on: 11/18/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
So that's who's keeping SGI alive  nucrash | 11/15/07
Biggest Power6 is only 32 cores  georgeou | 11/15/07
So IBM needs to scale it up.  nucrash | 11/16/07
I'm talking about single system image and shared RAM  georgeou | 11/16/07
Does it run Windows, George?  BanjoPaterson | 11/15/07
I know the answer  nucrash | 11/15/07
The real question is...  itpro_z | 11/15/07
That is a bit harder  nucrash | 11/15/07
It runs...  Zorched | 11/15/07
Thank you for the answer  BanjoPaterson | 11/15/07
NASA runs Linux, but Windows Server 2000 or 2003 does run Itanium  georgeou | 11/15/07
True - but will it cluster to the same degree?  BanjoPaterson | 11/15/07
Windows is a minority in the HPC space, but they're growing very fast  georgeou | 11/15/07
Fair Nuff (nt)  BanjoPaterson | 11/16/07
Backing up these Claims....  nucrash | 11/16/07
I don't think Windows will...  Linux User 147560 | 11/16/07
You never really know  nucrash | 11/16/07
Make no mistake, they're still noobs but they're learning fast  georgeou | 11/16/07
Linux (Red Hat or SuSE)  jashley | 11/16/07
What a joke  croberts | 11/15/07
Try and look at the research they're doing  georgeou | 11/15/07
The Moon Missions were needed for Morale  nucrash | 11/16/07
Sorry about the above rant  nucrash | 11/16/07
I agree  Linux User 147560 | 11/16/07
Yep  seanferd | 11/17/07
Fake Moon Mission  DigtalDude | 11/16/07
No it's more amazing what whackjobs like YOU believe!  pete_w_flynn@... | 11/16/07
Get a clue.  tim@... | 11/16/07
Oh.. puhleeze...  Zorched | 11/16/07
Nooohhh! It was aliens I tell ya!  JCitizen | 11/16/07
HA! HA! You funny!  JCitizen | 11/16/07
I do believe he was joking (nt)  seanferd | 11/17/07
Please help end the heartbreak of humor impairment  Bob.Kerns | 11/18/07
Hey it is just as funny to bomb the mock "hick"! (NT)  JCitizen | 11/18/07
This isn't for something that simple..  JCitizen | 11/16/07
Better weather forcasting  seanferd | 11/17/07
Especially if he lives in post Katrina territory...  JCitizen | 11/18/07
Titanium2 ? Intel Quad Core rules now days!  kingstarusa | 11/16/07
There is much more to it than the CPU  balsover | 11/16/07
Nothing but a troll...  bmerc | 11/16/07
Mike Cox could do better  nucrash | 11/16/07
It's a different purpose when you need to scale up, not out.  georgeou | 11/16/07
Imagine the frag fest that could host  Timpraetor | 11/16/07
As parallel as you want it to be.  Zorched | 11/16/07
RE: NASA gets SGI 2048-core Itanium 2 supercomputer  geblack | 11/16/07
RE: NASA gets SGI 2048-core Itanium 2 supercomputer  andy.furnival@... | 11/16/07
Vista will only support 2 processors  balsover | 11/16/07
RE: NASA gets SGI 2048-core Itanium 2 supercomputer  mlrodman@... | 11/16/07
Taxpayers?  drobinow | 11/16/07
RE: Taxpayers?  John_Doe69 | 11/16/07
Not near as much as Iraq  nucrash | 11/16/07

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