Friday | 5 September, 2008
Computerworld
Gigabit Ethernet powers computer clusters
Gigabit Ethernet most popular connecting technology among top 500 supercomputers
Tim Greene (Network World) 30/06/2008 07:39:49

Additional Resources
Executive Guides
Whitepapers
Zones
Zone logoZones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our Computerworld newsletters!
Computerworld's twice-daily news service keeps you in touch with the latest, most important headlines from Australia and around the world.
Keep up with the latest virtualisation technologies, products, news and features.
RSS Feeds

Gigabit Ethernet as a means to connect devices in data centers and storage facilities has earned another proof point -- a computing cluster in Germany that is linked by Gigabit Ethernet and that has ranked number 58 overall for performance among the top 500 supercomputing sites in the world.

The cluster at Max Planck Institute in Hanover, Germany, supports a 32.8 Teraflop cluster, which is a far cry from the petaflop level reached by IBM to claim the top spot on the Top500.com list of supercomputing installations.

But it is still an impressive amount of computing power generated by off-the-shelf equipment, and ranks the site as the No. 1 Gigabit Ethernet-connected facility on the list from among 285. That makes Gigabit Ethernet the most popular connecting technology among the top 500, behind Infiniband, which was used in 120.

The winning IBM supercomputer uses both Gigabit Ethernet and Infiniband.

The Max Planck cluster, called ATLAS, consists of Intel EM64T 32xx 2.4GHz processors supplied by Pyramid and connected via Gigabit Ethernet switches made by Woven Systems.

The switches feature Woven technology called Dynamic Congestion Performance. This detects when traffic bound for the same computational device will collide with other traffic with the same destination and switches some of the traffic to an alternate path.

This effectively prevents switches that connect the computational devices from being overwhelmed. It also reduces the amount of memory needed to buffer the switches because they have fewer collisions to deal with. Less memory lowers the cost of the switches, Woven Systems says.

ATLAS crunches numbers in an attempt to directly measure gravitational waves, warping of the space-time fabric postulated by Albert Einstein in 1916 but never directly observed.

More about VIA, Intel, IBM
Market Place

Computerworld Member Login


 

Prioritizing Services with IT Service Management (ITSM)

Computerworld Live Webinar
Wednesday 20th, August 2008
11:00am EST (Sydney, Australia)

To be repeated on:

Thursday 4th, September 2008
11:00am EST (Sydney Australia)

Sign up and receive a free copy of The Forrester WaveTM Service Desk Management Tools, Q2 2008 at the conclusion of the Webinar.

Attend and discover:

  • How to deliver value to your business through ITSM
  • Best practice ITSM implementation
  • Why emphasis is changing from optimizing IT management processes to better servicing customers and demonstrating real dollar value
  • If service-oriented ITSM is best for your business
Whitepaper

Microsoft 2008 Mission Critical IT

To help you deploy the new Microsoft '08 technologies into your mission-critical environments, EMC and Microsoft have developed and validated a number of reference architectures. Discover the benefits of leveraging these skills.

Enterprise IT Buyer's Guide
Find Technology Vendors Fast
 
Find vendors by name | Find by category
Sponsored Links