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November 08, 2005 08:04 AM US
Central Timezone
.gif) COLSA
Upgrades World's Largest Apple Cluster to High-Speed
Myricom Solution
ARCADIA,
Calif. & HUNTSVILLE, Ala.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 8,
2005--COLSA Corp., a provider of high-performance
computing systems and services to government agencies,
has completed upgrading the world's largest Apple-based
cluster to high-speed Myricom interconnect technology.
COLSA completed the migration of the 1536-node system
from Gigabit Ethernet to Myricom's low-latency, 2Gbps,
Myrinet-2000 technology in only two weeks, and has
already achieved application-performance improvements
averaging nearly forty percent.
Based in Huntsville, Alabama, COLSA Corp. provides
engineering services that include integration and
operation of High-Performance Computing (HPC) systems to
numerous clients within Department of Defense (DoD) and
other federal agencies. The company built and operates
the MACH5 Apple Xserve cluster under the U.S. Army
Hypersonic Missile Technology (HMT) program that studies
hypersonic airflow dynamics for missile and air vehicle
flight. The MACH5 cluster is configured with the
Myrinet-2000 technology on 1536 of its 1566 dual-G5
Apple Xserves, delivering a total of 3132 processors
with more than 4.5 Terabytes of memory. In its current
configuration, MACH5 is the largest and fastest cluster
of Apple computers worldwide.
Within a year of MACH5's initial deployment,
researchers' need for speed and efficiency began to
exceed the capabilities of the cluster's Gigabit
Ethernet interconnect technology. With customer needs
increasing and a pending expansion of the cluster by
several hundred nodes under discussion, COLSA elected to
upgrade the cluster interconnect, and began evaluating
options in terms of performance and the capability for
rapid, seamless migration of application programs.
"Our environment is unique, serving a division of the
government that has intensive computing requirements,
and our job is to ensure the highest efficiency HPC
environment for researchers with huge scientific
processing needs," says Mike Whitlock, Program Director
of COLSA's Hypersonic Missile Technology team. "As the
HMT team's demand for processing power grew at an
enormous rate, our CFD computations couldn't run
effectively on the original network and we began looking
at alternatives."
After evaluating several cluster-network options,
Whitlock's team opted to replace MACH5's existing
computational interconnect technology with Myrinet-2000
based on superior scalability, efficiency, and the
overall elegance of the solution. "We sent out an RFQ
and had three technologies respond, some very aggressive
on pricing and all very aggressive with claims of what
they could do," says Whitlock. "We ended up testing two
pilot systems on site: Myrinet, which we were able to
get fully operational ourselves within roughly a day,
and a competing technology from another vendor that sent
three engineers who stayed for four days to get an
operational system working. It was an easy decision and
it's worked out phenomenally."
Upon upgrading the MACH5 1536-node network within
three weeks, COLSA engineers reported test results
showing a 25-40% average increase in application
performance for the CRAFT code, the cluster's most
important day-to-day application. On the
High-Performance Linpack (HPL) benchmark used to rank
computers on the TOP500 supercomputer list, the MACH5
cluster achieved in excess of 16 Teraflops, nearly 66%
of peak, which would have corresponded to a rank of 10th
on the June-2005 TOP500 list.
Dr. Anthony DiRienzo, Executive Vice President of
COLSA, underscores that the company's decision
encompassed many criteria beyond simply speed. "We're
operating production facilities under federal
regulations, so our sourcing and selection processes
include a matrix of requirements ranging from ease of
installation and management to dependable uptime,
performance, cost, footprint, cable management, and
others," says DiRienzo. "We found Myrinet to have the
most efficient solution by far. The Myrinet solution was
"plug-and-play." The alternative solutions presented a
more complex and time consuming configuration utilizing
thick cumbersome cables that were difficult to install
and maintain compared with a tidy set of Myrinet fiber
cables neatly placed within the server racks. Just
looking at the two solutions, it was obvious to us and
to our customer that we made the right selection."
Myricom founder and Executive Vice President Dr. Nan
Boden said the experience with COLSA has been mutually
rewarding on numerous fronts. "Even in high-performance
computing, it isn't every day that we get to work with a
company whose real-world challenges are as sophisticated
as those COLSA faces," says Boden. "It's been extremely
rewarding for us to work with COLSA on the MACH5 cluster
and to see them embrace Myrinet to the point where
they're proposing Myrinet clusters to other government
clients."
About COLSA
COLSA, in business for over 25 years, supplies the
Department of Defense, NASA, and other government
agencies with system engineering and high performance
computing (HPC) services. COLSA manages three major HPC
facilities for the Army, Defense Intelligence Agency,
and NASA in the Huntsville, Alabama, vicinity. These
long term contracts are a result of COLSA's customer
focused reputation for over 97% HPC availability and
cost efficiency coupled with COLSA's future focused HPC
research efforts. See http://www.colsa.com/ for further
details about COLSA products and services.
About Myricom
Founded in 1994, Myricom, Inc., created Myrinet, the
high-performance computing (HPC) interconnect technology
used in many thousands of computing clusters in more
than 50 countries. Privately held, Myricom achieved and
sustained profitability since 1995 with forty-two
consecutive profitable quarters through September 2005.
Based in Arcadia, California, Myricom solutions are sold
direct and through channels. Myrinet clusters are
supplied by OEM computer companies including IBM, HP,
Dell, and Sun, and by a worldwide network of
high-quality cluster integrators. See http://www.myri.com/ for additional
information about Myricom and their products.
Photographs for feature stories are available through
COLSA's media contact. |
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