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To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (145707)10/19/2001 2:36:44 PM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Ten & Intel Investors - ITanium and Linux Clustered Systems results:

(Courtesy of Joe Pareti)

NCSA'S FIRST ITANIUM LINUX CLUSTER SHOWS TOP PERFORMANCE 10.19.01
SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING NEWS HPCwire
==============================================================================

Champaign, IL -- The world's largest Linux cluster running on Intel's(R)
64-bit Itanium(TM) architecture has been put through its first full-scale
operational test, and results show the system to be extremely scalable and
faster than more traditional high-performance computing systems.

The cluster, named Titan, consists of 160 dual-processor IBM IntelliStation
machines based on the Itanium architecture. Titan was installed at the
National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in August.
It will be available for use by the
academic research community later this year.

Currently NCSA technical staff are conducting test runs on the cluster as part
of their effort to determine its performance capabilities and ready it for
general scientific use. A recent run using the NAMD molecular dynamics code
proved that the cluster scales extremely well up to 300 processors and that it
can dramatically decrease the time needed to compute complicated molecular
dynamics simulations. In the test runs, Titan broke the one-day barrier for
computing one nanosecond of simulation time using NAMD. The runs used 256
processors, and the results were more than two times faster than the previous
best results.


"This is an extremely important result because it shows that scientists will
be able to analyze their data more efficiently and accomplish more scientific
research than they could before," said Dan Reed, director of NCSA and the
National Computational Science Alliance. "We are showing the world that
clusters based on commodity machines and processors will be the dominant
scientific computing platform in the coming years."

The run marked the first time that NAMD was able to compute as much as one
nanosecond of a benchmark simulation per day. The NAMD code was created by
University of Illinois physicist Klaus Schulten and his research team in the
Beckman Institute's Theoretical Biophysics Group, a research and development
center funded by the National Institutes of Health. Biomolecular simulations
look at processes in living cells at an atomic scale. They provide a look at
the cell's molecular machinery, which consists of hundreds of thousands of
atoms. Simulations on this scale require massive computing power, and it can
often take days or weeks to simulate one nanosecond of biomolecular activity.
Runs done by Schulten's group last summer used 135,000 CPU hours on NCSA's
Pentium III Linux cluster and simulated activity in 327,000 atoms over 3.8
nanoseconds.

These complex simulations also depend on computer systems that can scale up
and utilize hundreds of processors at a time. The NAMD runs done last summer,
for example, would've taken 15 years on a single processor.

"From my perspective, it is important to alert the community of biomolecular
modelers to the fact that Itanium Linux clusters work so well for molecular
dynamics simulations, and that they will allow a research team to look at
larger problems and do new science," said Schulten. "If NAMD can achieve such
performance, other modeling programs should be able to do it too. Having these
Linux clusters available to researchers will be a great resource for modelers
all around the country."

Both Titan and the Pentium III Linux cluster named Platinum have a peak
performance of 1 teraflops--or a trillion calculations per second. The two
clusters are NCSA's first terascale computers and will become part of the
TeraGrid computing system. NCSA is working with three academic and several
corporate partners to create the TeraGrid, the world's largest, fastest, most
comprehensive, distributed infrastructure for open scientific research. When
completed, the TeraGrid will include 13.6 teraflops of Linux cluster computing
power distributed at sites in Illinois and California.

For more on NAMD, visit ks.uiuc.edu For more on the
Theoretical Biophysics Group, visit ks.uiuc.edu

The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is a leader in developing and deploying
cutting-edge high-performance computing, networking, and information
technologies. NCSA is a partner in the TeraGrid project, a National Science
Foundation initiative to build and deploy the world's largest, fastest, most
comprehensive, distributed infrastructure for open scientific research. NCSA
also leads the National Computational Science Alliance (Alliance), a
partnership to prototype an advanced computational infrastructure for the 21st
century that includes more than 50 academic, government, and industry research
partners. The NSF Partnerships for Advanced Computational Infrastructure
(PACI) program funds the Alliance. In addition to the NSF, NCSA receives
support from the state of Illinois, the University of Illinois, private sector
partners, and other federal agencies. For more visit ncsa.uiuc.edu

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