German University Invests Over $18 Million into Innovative Scientific
Computing Infrastructure - Prime Contractor SGI to Deliver Altix System
with 6TB Shared-Memory and More Than 1,500 Itanium Processor Cores
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Aug. 25 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Dresden
University of Technology (TUD) has signed a contract with Silicon Graphics
(NYSE: SGI) to provide a high-performance computing environment representing
an investment of over $18 million, which will give TUD a distinction as Center
for Scientific Computing. In two project phases to be completed within twelve
months, a state-of-the-art, innovative and flexibly usable infrastructure with
computational power of more than a dozen teraflops will be implemented. This
will enable investigators in scientific areas such as physics, material
sciences, engineering, bioinformatics and nanotechnology to find answers to
new types of challenging problems.
As central component, SGI will install a large SGI(R) Altix(R)
shared-memory system containing 6,000 Gigabytes of contiguously usable main
memory and more than 1,500 processor cores based on the most recent Intel(R)
Itanium(R) 2 dual-core technology. This HPC platform will pave the way for a
new category of capability computing serving as a concentrated resource for
selected projects, acting as a knowledge accelerator and allowing the
researchers to work on challenging problems beyond the scope of traditional
number crunching.
Beyond providing high computational performance, the procurement --
running under the designation "HPC/Storage Complex for Data Intensive
Computing" -- will be specifically built to achieve very high data bandwidths
by drawing on an intelligently architected, multi-level storage system. This
tiered storage system will enable very high speed storing, moving and
archiving of extremely large datasets.
To this end, SGI plans to install a Storage Area Network complex (SAN)
containing 60 terabytes (TB) of online disk capacity, which provides a
bandwidth of 8 GB/s (gigabytes per second) to the Altix system, and is capable
of feeding a Petabyte-sized (PB) archive tape robot with high data rate.
Another 50TB large SAN will be provided and connected to the throughput
system, with the option of efficient access to the first SAN and hence the
archiving system.
Both SAN systems are based on the SGI(R) InfiniteStorage SAN solution,
using fibre channel disk array systems from Data Direct Network; a PB-sized
tape library system from Storage Technology Corp will serve as the archive
robot. For hierarchical storage management including life cycle management and
data storage and retrieval the SGI(R) InfiniteStorage DMF (Data Migration
Facility) software is provided. Shared file system functionality on the HPC
system is implemented through SGI(R) InfiniteStorage CXFS(TM), while on the
throughput system a Lustre file system - commonly deployed in many of the
large US laboratories -- will be used. Both platforms will be running under
Novell's SUSE(R) LINUX Enterprise Sever operating environment.
Complementary to this system, SGI will integrate a PC farm from Linux
Networx with roughly 700 single system boards; acting as a platform for
capacity computing, the PC farm will serve the throughput requirements of many
hundreds of users throughout the Dresden campus.
The procurement is one of the largest HPC contracts to be tendered within
Europe in 2005. According to Prof. Hermann Kokenge, Rector of TUD, "The system
will effectively strengthen the innovational capabilities of the university,
the Dresden area, and the surrounding region. It will provide a critical mass
of additional computing power and novel working facilities to obtain
groundbreaking discoveries."
Accumulated HPC Resources for Bold Questions
How can one discover highly robust organic materials that may replace
metallic alloys in osteal (bone) surgery? How is it possible to grow novel
types of crystals? What methods allow subduing background noise within a
vehicle? Which techniques of tracking and understanding of cellular growth
processes can be achieved via automatic cell microscopy? How can one analyze
and influence the genetic causes of illnesses? These are only a few questions
and application areas that will be tackled by researchers using the new TUD
computing environment.
No matter which area of research a scientist is concerned with, be it the
analysis of bio-molecular reactions, the methods for protein docking or
quantum chemistry, the folding of three dimensional structures, the analysis
of films or the study of turbulent flows in electro-fluid materials under the
influence of external magnetic fields using methods of computational fluid
dynamics -- the Altix platform provides new perspectives for many
computational-based scientific methods.
Selected projects will have the opportunity to utilize up to two-thirds of
the whole system for some period of time if required. Hundreds of processors
working in parallel can then use the memory as a single, contiguously
addressable entity, load enormously large data sets in one piece, efficiently
perform their calculations on them or investigate them for patterns or
similarities.
"We intend to enable bold and complex projects on the SGI Altix. Our focus
is on providing a novel type of HPC tool to the scientific computing
community," said Prof. Wolfgang E. Nagel, Director of ZIH (Center for
Information Services & HPC). "Our efforts do not center on the usual
simulation scenarios, we are more concerned with providing a platform which
gives our users the opportunity to extract new and concise knowledge from huge
amounts of structured or unstructured data encompassing a lot of hidden
information."
In-memory computing is just one of the innovations offered to the
scientists by ZIH via the SGI HPC platform; for the first time it will be
possible to simultaneously load several complete scientific databases into the
memory subsystem, and to search them for certain correlations at unprecedented
speed. The problem besetting and hindering these kinds of investigations up to
now -- the need for time-intensive I/O processing and disk accesses -- is
being eliminated by in-memory computing.
To make capability computing feasible for alternating projects, it must be
possible to rapidly load the HPC platform for a single run, and then to
rapidly unload it to make the resources available for the next user. The SGI
solution can load 4TB of data to memory within 10 minutes, and, at the end of
a project run, is capable of saving computing results to the archive system
with a 25TB in 4 hours. Nagel: "This is outstanding and allows scientists to
use the machine as a real theory accelerator."
"We are pleased to implement a project of this size and ambition in
Germany, which will be considered a significant achievement by the global HPC
community," added Robert Ubelmesser, Director of Strategic HPC Projects,
Europe, SGI. "The idea of data-intensive scientific computing with all its
challenges and chances has been pursued by ZIH in a visionary manner. We take
pride in providing the enabling technology for this future oriented concept."
According to Hannes Schwaderer, Executive Director of Intel GmbH: "Intel's
Itanium 2 architecture is the fastest growing CPU architecture for HPC
deployments. We're pleased by its success at the universities, and we're proud
to now also provide Dresden with a very powerful system based on the Itanium
processor architecture, after having gained Leibniz Computing Center in Munich
as a customer that takes advantage of thousands of our processor cores. The
combination of dual-core Itanium 2 CPUs with SGI's innovative shared-memory
technology in the Altix systems will provide Dresden with the capability to
answer very complex questions."
Two-Phase Delivery -- Starting in Autumn 2005
A third of the total capacity -- memory and processing power -- is planned
to be installed in autumn 2005. It will primarily serve ZIH as a preparation
environment, and allow users to optimize algorithms and prepare themselves for
the new possibilities. An SGI(R) Altix(R) 3000 BX2 system will be installed in
this first phase. The installation is to be completed in the second phase of
the project scheduled for summer 2006. When the system is completely
installed, a next-generation Altix system will have taken over the HPC
workload.
Award of Tender after tough competition
"This is the third time in a row that Dresden has selected SGI as
preferred HPC partner -- and it's a 128-processor SGI(R) Origin(R) 3800 system
we actually use for running our HPC shared memory jobs," explains ZIH Director
Nagel. "However, SGI was required to prevail in a tough, very challenging
competition. We made our decision in favor of SGI because the company is
capable of delivering a system with such a uniquely large shared-memory size.
This is a distinguishing factor - enabling us to provide our clients with a
unique quality of service for their novel and challenging investigations."
Nagel concluded: "We will get an extremely balanced and versatile
computing and storage complex -- with excellent components and a consistently
high level of bandwidth that allows us to offer a powerful total resource for
challenging new scientific computing problems in the homogeneous as well as
heterogeneous requirement regime."
http://www.sgi.com