Jaguar, Roadrunner in horse race to be world's fastest supercomputer
Cray's $100M upgrade uses more power, but is simpler to run than IBM's Roadrunner
November 13, 2008 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Just five months after IBM's hybrid Roadrunner became the first supercomputer to break the lofty petaflop barrier, a second, more traditional machine has made the same leap.
And at least one industry watcher said the move of Cray's XT Jaguar supercomputer -- with the help of a $100 million upgrade -- into the petaflop realm is swinging the doors wide open for other systems that are on the verge of following it to a new level of power and speed.
"We'll start to see more and more machines passing this point," said Jack Dongarra, a co-creator of the Top500 list and a distinguished professor at the University of Tennessee. "I would not be surprised to see one of the [IBM] BlueGene/P machines passing this point soon. We broke through this mark. That's a big thing. Now everybody follows that first machine to enter. We'll have a whole wave of machines cross that barrier."
The U.S. Department of Energy announced earlier this week that the latest implementation of the XT Jaguar supercomputer, housed at the DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tenn., hit a peak performance of 1.64 petaflops, or more than a quadrillion mathematical calculations per second. Last June, IBM's Roadrunner was the first to break the barrier, hitting a sustained speed of 1.026 petaflops. A few weeks later, Roadrunner was officially crowned the fastest computer in the world when it made the top spot on the semiannual Top500 List of supercomputers.
The latest Top500 List of supercomputers is expected to be released next Tuesday at the Supercomputing Conference in Austin. Dongarra told Computerworld that he won't divulge which machine will be at the top of their list, but he called Jaguar a "very powerful machine."
Steve Scott, chief technology officer at Cray Inc., said in an earlier interview that while the Cray machine surpassed Roadrunner's June numbers, the IBM machine, which is operating at DOE's Los Alamos National Laboratory, could have been upgraded since then.
Dongarra said IBM's hybrid supercomputer has been updated since June, but would not disclose its latest performance numbers. Today, IBM would not say whether Roadrunner has been upgraded since June.
"Roadrunner is a rather specialized machine. It's a hybrid [system] with AMD Opteron processors, and the Cell chip with its PowerPC core and eight added processors," said Dongarra. "To have three different processors, means you need three different programs, one for each type of processor. Jaguar is a more traditional setup; it looks much more like a conventional parallel system. That translates into an ease of programming. You have to write one program in a traditional parallel fashion. Jaguar will be easier to use and easier to program by a wider group of people. It's also simpler to port existing software to that platform."
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