tlb
Volume 4, Number 24 -- June 26, 2007

NASA to Replace 'Columbia' Itanium-InfiniBand Cluster

Published: June 26, 2007

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, has been a very big and steady customer for supercomputer maker Silicon Graphics, and has been the place where SGI could count on getting big boxes into the field and tested on complex workloads. NASA Ames is the home of the "Columbia" cluster, which is based on a cluster of Altix Linux servers glued together with InfiniBand switches and which is ranked the eighth most powerful supercomputer in the world at the moment. But, IBM has got its foot in the door and has won a deal that will allow it to take part in the bidding to replace Columbia.

The Columbia cluster was acquired by NASA Ames in the summer of 2004, and currently consists of 10,160 Itanium 2 chips running at 1.5 GHz. The cluster has a rating of 51.9 sustained teraflops on the Linpack Fortran benchmark test (nearly 61 teraflops peak), and could be easily upgraded to dual-core "Montecito" Itanium 9000 chips delivering more than twice the oomph. SGI is working on new blade architecture designs, and is counting on Intel's "Tukwila" Itanium chips, due next year, to offer its customers even more computing power.

NASA Ames seems to have come to the conclusion that it is always a good idea to have two vendors to grind against each other, and has given a contract to IBM for a small evaluation system that will allow NASA to put the System p5 architecture through the paces against the Itanium-InfiniBand combo. This relatively small cluster that IBM has been commission to build is comprised of System p5 575+ servers with a total of 640 processors and delivering 5.6 teraflops of peak performance, which will sit beside Columbia and augment its current processing capacity.

As part of its upgrading of supercomputing capacity, NASA plans to do a four-phase deployment to move to a machine that is much more powerful than Columbia. The IBM System p5 575+ cluster is part of the initial bidding process and IBM has not, unlike what the press release seems to suggest, been awarded the deal. (This box is not phase one of the deployment.) SGI is demonstrating benchmarks running on gear, too, according to sources at NASA. And who knows who else will try to chase the deal. Cray is an obvious potential bidder, as is Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard.


RELATED STORIES

NASA to Acquire Huge SGI Altix Linux Cluster

SGI Extends Linux to 256 Processors on Altix Supers



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
VIBRANT TECHNOLOGIES

HP, IBM and Sun Server Deals via RSS

                                                  · Subscribe to our Specials via RSS
                                                  · Up to 80% off manufacturer's list price
                                                  · Multi-million dollar inventory

We Buy & Sell new and remarketed servers,
upgrades, peripherals and parts.

HP Proliant, IBM xSeries, IBM pSeries, RS6000,
HP Integrity, Sun Microsystems, Cisco, more…
888-443-8606

View or Subscribe to:
Special Offers on Servers and Upgrades


Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

COMMON:  Join us at the Annual 2008 conference, March 30 - April 3, in Nashville, Tennessee
ANSYS:  Engineering simulation solutions for more than 30 years
Scalix:  Advanced email and calendaring for power users in the enterprise


The Four Hundred
The AS/400 at 19: Predicting the Future--Or Not

IBM Kills Off System i ServerProven, Standard Edition Rebates

VoIP and the Search for Single Points of Failure

As I See It: Dare to Be Rich

Four Hundred Stuff
IBM Taps Nortel for Entry-Level System i VoIP Solution

North Carolina Schools Laud SafeData for Online DR Solution

NGS Hooks Into Query/400 to Protect BI Investments

S4i Expands File Support in Document Management Software

Big Iron
Mainsoft Updates .NET-Java Tool with 2.0 Release

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
Parameter Passing and Performance

Conditional Counting with Open Query File

What Is SMIOSTCPGT and Why Is It Eating My System?

System i PTF Guide
June 16, 2007: Volume 9, Number 24

June 9, 2007: Volume 9, Number 23

June 2, 2007: Volume 9, Number 22

May 26, 2007: Volume 9, Number 21

May 19, 2007: Volume 9, Number 20

May 12, 2007: Volume 9, Number 19

The Windows Observer
MPack Hacker Tool Claims 10,000 Compromised Web Sites

Microsoft Ships Updated Dynamics ERP Products

Intel Bangs the Itanium Drum, Draws Out Roadmap

Linspire Hooks Up with Microsoft, Too

The Unix Guardian
Intel Bangs the Itanium Drum, Draws Out Roadmap

Sun Revs Solaris Express Developer Edition, Adds Non-Sun Iron Support

Disk Array Sales Still Humming Along, Says IDC

Vision Solutions Acquires HA Rival Lakeview Technology

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

IT Security
Storage Guardian
Arkeia
nuBridges
Vibrant Technologies



TABLE OF CONTENTS
Mandriva, Ubuntu Not Interested in Microsoft Deals

SGI Launches Blade-Style Altix Linux Supers

Fujitsu Adds New Blade Chassis, Quad-Core Server

The CIO Is the Hammer, and Everything IT Vendors See Are Nails

But Wait, There's More:


IBM Offers Virtualization-Friendly Pricing for RHEL 5 on Power . . . Red Hat Targets Unix Boxes at Telecom Companies . . . NASA to Replace 'Columbia' Itanium-InfiniBand Cluster . . . IBM Previews Virtualization Management Tool for Power-Based Boxes . . . Database Sales Grew By 14.2 Percent in 2006, Says Gartner . . . MPack Hacker Tool Claims 10,000 Compromised Web Sites . . .

The Linux Beacon

BACK ISSUES





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement