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IBM plans world's most powerful Linux supercomputer

The supercomputer cluster will be based on the eServer 325 system
Martyn Williams, IDG News Service   Today’s Top Stories    or  Other Linux and Unix Stories  
 

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July 30, 2003 (IDG News Service) -- A Japanese national research laboratory has placed an order with IBM for a supercomputer cluster that, when completed, is expected to be the most powerful Linux-based computer in the world.
The order, from Japan's National Institute for Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), was announced by the company today as it simultaneously launched the eServer 325 system on which the cluster will be largely based. The eServer 325 is a 1U (1U=1.75 in.) rack-mounted system that includes two Advanced Micro Devices Inc. Opteron processors of either model 240, 242 or 246, said IBM in a statement.
The supercomputer ordered by AIST will be built around 1,058 of these eServer 325 systems, for a total of 2,116 Opteron 246 processors, and an additional number of Intel Corp. servers that include 520 of the company's third-generation Itanium 2 processor, code-named Madison.
The Opteron systems will collectively deliver a theoretical peak performance of 8.5 trillion calculations per second, and the Itanium 2 systems will add 2.7 trillion calculations per second for a total theoretical peak performance for the entire cluster of 11.2 trillion calculations per second.
That would rank it just above the current most powerful Linux supercomputer, a cluster based on Intel's Xeon processor and run by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the U.S. That machine has a theoretical peak performance of 11.1 trillion calculations per second, according to the latest version of the Top 500 supercomputer ranking.
Based on that ranking, the new machine would make Japan home to two out of the three most powerful computers in the world. The current most powerful machine, the NEC Corp.-built Earth Simulator of the Japan Marine Science and Technology Center, has a theoretical peak performance of 41 trillion calculations per second while that of the second-fastest machine, Los Alamos National Laboratory's ASCI Q, is 20.5 trillion calculations per second.
The eServer 325 can run either the Linux or Windows operating systems, and the supercomputer ordered by AIST will run SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 8. IBM said it expects to deliver the cluster to AIST in March. AIST will link the machine with others as part of a supercomputer grid that will be used in research of grid technology, life sciences bioinformatics and nanotechnology, IBM said.
General availability of the eServer 325 is expected in October, with prices starting at $2,919. The computers can also be accessed through IBM's on-demand service, where users pay for processing power based on capacity and duration.
IBM's announcement is the second piece of good news for AMD and its Opteron processor in the last two weeks. The processor, which can handle both 32- and 64-bit applications, was launched in April.
China's Dawning Information Industry Co. announced plans last week to build a supercomputer based on AMD's Opteron processor. The Dawning 4000A will include more than 2,000 Opteron processors, with a total of 2TB of RAM and 30TB of hard-disk space, and is expected to deliver performance of about 10 trillion calculations per second. The Beijing-based company has an order for the machine but hasn't disclosed the name of the buyer or when the computer will go into service.
Opteron processors were also chosen for a supercomputer likely to displace the AIST machine as the most powerful Linux supercomputer. Cray Inc. is currently constructing a Linux-based supercomputer called Red Storm that is expected to deliver a peak performance of 40 trillion calculations per second when it is delivered in late 2004. SuSE Linux AG is also working with Cray on that machine.





Reprinted with permission from

For more news from IDG visit IDG.net
Story copyright 2006 International Data Group. All rights reserved.


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