November 14, 2014

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Oak Ridge to acquire next generation supercomputer

Supercomputer simulations enable researchers to address the most challenging problems in diverse scientific arenas. Pictured is a volume rendering of shear-wave perturbations computed in the seismology simulation code SPECFEM3D_GLOBE. Credit: Dave Pugmire, ORNL.
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Supercomputer simulations enable researchers to address the most challenging problems in diverse scientific arenas. Pictured is a volume rendering of shear-wave perturbations computed in the seismology simulation code SPECFEM3D_GLOBE. Credit: Dave Pugmire, ORNL.

The U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF) has signed a contract with IBM to bring a next-generation supercomputer to Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). The OLCF's new hybrid CPU/GPU computing system, Summit, will be delivered in 2017.

Summit will provide at least five times the performance of Titan, the OLCF's current leadership system, for a wide range of scientific applications. The hybrid system will support DOE's Office of Science in its broad science and energy mission, addressing the most challenging and impactful science problems for government, academia, and industry.

Among the goals researchers will pursue by applying Summit's capabilities in diverse scientific arenas:

The system's vendor, IBM, and major component suppliers, NVIDIA and Mellanox, are all participating in an open architecture technology collaboration known as the OpenPOWER Foundation.

"Summit builds on the hybrid multi-core architecture that the OLCF successfully pioneered with Titan," says Buddy Bland, the director of the Summit project at the OLCF. "The large, powerful nodes allow applications to achieve very high performance without having to scale to hundreds of thousands of Message Passing Interface (MPI) tasks. The combination of very large memory per node and the powerful IBM POWER and NVIDIA processors provides an ideal platform for data analysis as well as computation."

Summit will feature more than 3,400 nodes, each with:

Summit will have a dual-rail Mellanox EDR interconnect configured as a full, non-blocking fat-tree. The file system will be a GPFS Storage Server system with 1TB/s I/O bandwidth and 120 PB of disk capacity.

System software will include: IBM XL, NVIDIA, and PGI environments supporting OpenMP and OpenACC programming, IBM HPC software including Linux, Platform Computing LSF scheduler, resource manager, system management, and GPFS parallel file system.

"High-performance computing has become a key part of technology advancement and scientific discovery," says Jim Hack, Director of the National Center for Computational Sciences at ORNL. "The OLCF is being used to solve some of the most demanding and important science problems in the world. Summit will allow us to continue in this mission through the end of the decade."

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