National Energy Research Center Selecting Cascade Cray HPC
And 6PB Sonexion storage system
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on July 5, 2012 at 2:42 pmCray Inc. announced it will
install a next-generation Cray supercomputer code-named Cascade and a
next-generation Cray Sonexion storage system at the Department of Energy’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing
Center (NERSC).
Cray’s Cascade system will provide a supercomputing resource to
NERSC users working to advance open science research in climate modeling,
biology, environmental sciences, combustion, materials science, chemistry,
geosciences, fusion energy, astrophysics, nuclear and high-energy physics, and
other disciplines, along with scientific visualization of massive data sets.
NERSC is also home to a Cray XE6 supercomputer, named Hopper.
"From energy efficient batteries to
climate change, NERSC’s 4,500 users are tackling problems that are of vital
importance to our nation’s competiveness and sustainability, so it is critical
that our next system NERSC-7, deliver readily accessible performance on real-world
applications," says Kathy Yelick, associate laboratory director of
Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab.
According to Yelick, it is also important that NERSC provide supercomputing
resources to users in an energy efficient manner, and she says the new Cray
system will enable many pioneering features on this front, including the
ability to run year-round using ‘free-cooling’ at the NERSC site.
"This approach utilizes water from
cooling towers only, not mechanical chillers, to provide exceptional energy
efficiency. The moderate Bay Area climate combined with Cray’s new design will
allow us to keep power for cooling to less than 10% of the power used for
computing," said Jeff Broughton, head of NERSC’s System’s Department.
"The researchers and scientists at
NERSC are tackling an amazing set of important challenges across a wide range
of scientific disciplines, and we are incredibly honored to provide their vast
user community with a productive environment that also delivers high sustained
performance," said Peter Ungaro, president and CEO of Cray. "Our development team has been busy working
on our future products and we are very excited to see that the new innovations
in our next generation of supercomputers and storage solutions are meeting the
needs of leading customers such as NERSC. They are a great partner and we are
excited that our relationship with them will continue."
Cray’s next-generation Cascade supercomputer, which is expected to be widely
available in the first half of 2013, is the next step in Cray’s Adaptive
Supercomputing vision. The system will provide over two petaflops of peak
performance for NERSC. The system will feature advancements of the Cray
Linux Environment, Cray’s HPC-optimized programming environment, and the
next-generation Aries interconnect chipset. Cascade will also feature support
for Intel Xeon processors – a first for Cray’s high-end systems. The Cascade
supercomputer is in part made possible by Cray’s participation in the Defense
Advanced Research Project Agency’s (DARPA) High Productivity Computing Systems
program.
The Cray Sonexion storage system delivered to NERSC will scale to more than 6PB of usable storage and more 140GB per second of sustained aggregate IO
performance. Sonexion brings together an integrated file system, software and
storage offering that has been designed specifically for a range of HPC
workloads, providing users with an integrated, scalable Lustre solution.
Sonexion storage system combines servers, the latest Lustre
parallel file system and management software into a modular and
scalable storage product that is tested at scale, and supported as a
solution by Cray.
Consisting of products and services, the multi-year, multi-phase procurement is
valued at more than $40 million. The system is expected to go into production
in 2013.