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IBM wins hybrid supercomputer deal

Hurmoth   on 07 September 2006 - 02:26 · 14 comments & 8095 views

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IBM has won a deal to build a supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratory that will pair more than 16,000 AMD Opteron processors with more than 16,000 Cell processors to try to reach a new computing milestone for the company.

Dubbed Roadrunner, the supercomputer uses a hybrid approach that combines a conventional cluster of Opteron servers with Cell chips that handle some of the calculating grunt work. Each Cell chip, originally designed by IBM, Sony and Toshiba for the Sony PlayStation 3 video game console, includes eight special-purpose engines that can rapidly perform physics calculations.

IBM and the Energy Department's National Nuclear Security Administration announced Wednesday that Big Blue had won the contract. Pete Domenici, a Republican senator from New Mexico, where the nuclear weapons lab is located, said of the deal, "It's time to restore LANL to the forefront of computing technology. Together with IBM, the lab will undertake an exciting goal of creating the world's fastest supercomputer."



LANL's sister lab, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, currentlyhouses the top-ranked machine, IBM's Blue Gene/L, which can perform 280trillion calculations per second, or 280 teraflops. Roadrunner isdesigned to nearly quadruple that to a sustained speed of 1 quadrillionfloating-point operations per second, or a petaflop.

Roadrunner, which will run Linux and include software to juggle tasks between the Opteron and Cell processors, will be built using commercially available IBM hardware. That includes System x3755 servers with four Opteron processors apiece and IBM BladeCenter H servers with Cell-based systems.

View: Full Article @ CNET News.com

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(1 reply) #1 Xerxes on 07 Sep 2006 - 03:03
Sounds interesting nice to see Cell been used for other applications. For a while there I thought it was gonna end up only been in the PS3.
#1.1 tareqsiraj on 07 Sep 2006 - 16:05
I think Toshiba will use them on their HDTV too...
(1 reply) #2 HoochieMamma on 07 Sep 2006 - 03:09
Pffft this thing will probably get 40fps in UT2007 :p
#2.1 Kushan on 07 Sep 2006 - 03:24
It just might run BF2, though.
#3 perochan on 07 Sep 2006 - 03:50
thats good. theres some hope for Cell!
#4 jerichey on 07 Sep 2006 - 04:01
one word...WOW.
#5 iOsiris on 07 Sep 2006 - 05:35
i wonder how that fares running a modern game thru software rendering.
#6 sunbiz_3000 on 07 Sep 2006 - 06:22
Always thought Cell was an amazing processor, brought into the light a little before its time... But I guess slowly Cell will become the everywhere processor!!
#7 Shiranui on 07 Sep 2006 - 07:01
and so Skynet is born...
(1 reply) #8 strekship on 07 Sep 2006 - 07:02
Wait, how is it possable to use cell processors and Opterons together. Don't they have radically different architectures?
#8.1 Arkos Reed on 07 Sep 2006 - 08:04
the cell chips can be used as coprocessors on daughterboards (that's just a basic example, the architecture in these kinds of servers is radically different)
#9 swordfish on 07 Sep 2006 - 07:27
Very interesting.
#10 Shining Arcanine on 07 Sep 2006 - 13:23
They should be using Woodcrests instead of Opterons. Woodcrests are much faster than Opterons and they should yield much higher performance.
#11 Rail Grinder on 07 Sep 2006 - 16:17
hehee i wonder how high the hydro bill's gunna be for 32,000 cpus

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