Army makes major Linux HPC cluster move
Purchase will more than double MSRC's computing capability
February 13, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
A U.S. Army supercomputing center with a legacy that dates to the first large computer, the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) launched in 1946, is moving to Linux-based clusters in a major hardware purchase that will more than double its computing capability.
The Army Research Laboratory Major Shared Resource Center (MSRC)is buying four Linux Networx Inc. Advanced Technology Clusters, including a system with 4,488 processing cores, or 1,122 nodes, with each node made up of two dual-core Intel Xeon chips. A second system has 842 nodes.
In total, this purchase will increase its computing capability from 36 trillion floating-point operations per second (TFLOPS) to more than 80 TFLOPS, Army officials said.
The MSRC, which is based at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Harford County, Md., has been involved in every aspect of computing technology since its beginning, and this decision to move into commodity clusters was not made quickly, said Charles J. Nietubicz, director of the MSRC.
The lab held a symposium in 2003 to explore the issue and began running a small, 256-processor cluster system. "We saw that cluster computing was this new kid on the block and was interesting," said Nietubicz, but the center wasn't about to start scrapping its other systems made by Silicon Graphics Inc., Sun Microsystems Inc. and IBM, he said.
The MSRC isn't disclosing the purchase price, but Earl Joseph, an analyst at IDC in Framingham, Mass., said the average cost for a cluster works out to about $2,000 per processor compared with $12,000 per processor for a RISC-based system.
Nietubicz said other vendors "are going to have to begin to recognize that either they provide some other kind of performance to try to gain the increased price, or they are going to have to reduce the price to provide equivalent performance."
Bluffdale, Utah-based Linux Networx builds systems using Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Intel Corp. chips. In addition to the four systems sold to the MSRC, it also sold one to the Dugway Proving Ground. In total, the sale of the five systems is the company's largest supercomputing order ever. The sale was announced today.
Nietubicz said he was convinced that clusters can work based on the MSRC's ability to get certain computational codes used in fluid dynamics, structural mechanics and other processes to scale to multiple processors mostly by using Message Passing Interface (MPI) protocol-based code. MPI is used to create parallel applications.
The major competitor to supercomputing clusters and their distributed memory systems is symmetric multiprocessing, or SMP, a shared-memory
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Accelerate SSL Encrypted Applications
The amount of SSL traffic is growing in the enterprise. Because it is encrypted, it cannot be properly controlled and accelerated. Blue Coat...
Modernizing the IT Infrastructure
(Source: Oracle) There is a lot of legacy in many government IT systems today - legacy hardware, legacy software platforms, and legacy skills...
ESG Lab Field Audit
Many companies have successfully implemented Riverbed WAN optimization solutions within their Cisco networks. This ESG Lab Field Audit document explores the success that...
Usability Is Everything
Learn what sets Workday's HR and Payroll solutions apart from the competition....
Shape Your Apps Strategy to Reflect New SaaS Licensing and Pricing Trends
Why are smart companies choosing software-as-a-service? Find out in the complimentary Forrester Research report...
The Value of Real SaaS at Workday
Cost savings, speed to value, and innovation brought to the enterprise by Workday's software-as-a-service solutions for HR and Payroll....
Natural User Interface for Enterprise Applications
Learn how a revolutionary user interface can make a complex enterprise application so intuitive even casual users can jump right in....
SaaS at Flextronics, Inc.
Dave Smoley, CIO of Flextronics, discusses the real value of software-as-a-service and why he chose Workday for his HR solution....
A Truly Global HCM System
Learn about a system built with advanced object-oriented technology that support multi-national requirements and costs less to implement, maintain and upgrade....
Why Compliance Pays
This OnDemand webcast explores the relationship that firms with best compliance records have higher revenue, greater customer retention, lower financial losses from data...
Subscribe to Computerworld
