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HPCwire: IBM Bails on Blue Waters Supercomputer

IBM has pulled the plug on Blue Waters, the 10-petaflop supercomputer that was to be delivered to National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois. Originally planned to come online in 2011, the system was subsequently scheduled for a 2012 deployment. According to a joint statement issued by IBM and NCSA over the weekend, the contract was officially terminated on August 6, citing “increased financial and technical support by IBM beyond its original expectations.”

Funded by a $208 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) under its Track 1 leadership program, Blue Waters was slated to be NCSA’s premier supercomputer for open science and engineering. The Power7-based system was designed to deliver 10 petaflops of peak performance and one petaflop of sustained performance for scientific applications. it was also going to be the central resource for the newly formed Great Lakes Consortium for Petascale Computation, a collection of dozens of universities, colleges, research labs, and institutes that were going to share the machine’s leading-edge computational capabilities.

According to John Melchi, who heads the Administration Directorate at NCSA, IBM made some assumptions about the cost and complexity of the machine that just didn’t bear out. The original proposal by IBM specified a system with more than 200,000 Power7 processor cores, a petabyte of memory, and over 10 petabytes of disk storage. NCSA, though, would not comment on the specific nature of the cost and complexity issues that led IBM to terminate the work. “The bottom line is that it became financially unfeasible for them to move forward,” Melchi told HPCwire.

What is noteworthy is that IBM now seems willing to make good on its strategy to turn its supercomputer business into a profit center, even at the cost of some lost prestige. When HPCwire spoke with Herb Schultz, marketing manager for IBM’s Deep Computing unit, last year, he outlined a new business model that would apply a lot more scrutiny to how the company positioned its high-end supercomputers. “There is really no appetite in IBM anymore — with some of the leadership changes over the last few years — for revenue that has no profit with it,” he told us back in November 2010. that was more than two years after NCSA and IBM had inked the final deal on Blue Waters.

From NCSA’s perspective, the system met all of its technical requirements. in particular, they appeared confident the machine, based on Power 755 servers, would indeed be able to deliver a sustained petaflop from its 10-petaflop peak performance. The supercomputer design was such that the memory and storage were globally addressable, providing an application environment friendly to super-sized shared-memory applications. The architecture, known as PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computing System), was the result of IBM’s work under DARPA’s High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS), a program whose goal was to create economically viable multi-petaflop systems.

While the multi-petaflop requirement seems to have been met, IBM’s termination of Blue Waters calls into question whether PERCS will be able to deliver on the “economically viable” goal. there are, in fact, several other Power 755-based supercomputers in the pipeline for IBM, including ones at the University of Lugano (Switzerland), SARA (The Netherlands), and the LSU Center for Computation & Technology, but none of these approach the scale of the Blue Waters machine. IBM’s remaining leading-edge petascale deployment, the 20-petaflop Sequoia system for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, is based on Blue Gene/Q technology.

The most curious aspect of the IBM pull-out is that they had already delivered three racks of Power 755 servers to NCSA. in the midst of delivery, the company made the decision not to continue, offering no explanation of what precipitated the termination. IBM spokesperson Joanna Brewer had this to say: “As we moved forward with the project, increased cost for the final design and continued changes required us to come to the decision to no longer provide the supercomputer for Blue Waters.” The three racks of servers will all be returned to IBM, and IBM will refund the $30 million already collected from the University of Illinois for the initial deployment work.

According to Melchi, the NSF has directed NCSA to “replan the project” over the next few weeks, with a goal of fielding a system by the end of 2012. Specifically, the agency has asked them to propose an alternate system and vendor that meets the project’s original goals. Although he wouldn’t say if they were leaning in any particular direction, there are not too many choices at the high-end of the supercomputing spectrum. Cray with its XE6/XK6 machines or SGI with the Altix UV are two prominent choices, with the latter having the advantage of a shared memory architecture.

Whether a new RFP will be issued is unclear, but given the aggressive timeframe for deployment, that seems unlikely. in any case, building and installing a multi-petaflop machine capable of delivering a sustained petaflop in less than 18 months is going to be quite a challenge. From Melchi’s perspective, though, it’s doable. The Illinois Petascale Computing Facility, the datacenter originally built for Blue Waters, is all ready to go, and other pieces of infrastructure are in place as well. “We believe that we’re going to be able to bring a system online that is as big or bigger than what was proposed with the Power7 technology,” he says.

Are there any open source tools available to benchmark the performance of an SGI Altix server running Linux?

Other than using the 'top' command, how can i find how much of processor and RAM utilisation is happening? Coz I dont trust the RAM usage report by the 'top' command. seems to be wrong.

Do you want to rebuild YOUR world in the direction of your desires?

There is no need to escape.
You can rebuild your world in the style you like. I don’t mean just your perception. The power of focused intention with rationality based tools is far greater than conventions have us imagine.

It is first necessary to evaluate assumptions to see which ones are pragmatically verifiable, and which are put there by various influences with agendas. After all the non-verifiable assumptions are discarded you wind up with these few simple truths.

1-Everything is always changing. The time scales vary, but nothing is constant.
2-Causes produce effects. sometimes this is not obvious and there is a choice about choosing to believe in gods who can suspend cause-effect, or sticking with the pragmatically observable.
3-Life is both physical and non-physical. The bag of mostly water is just a bag of mostly water without the intangibles like life, hope, identity, consciousness.
-Putting these 3 truths into a simple formula to focus on will enable the mind to be much more effective at dealing with whatever.
-Respecting rationally derived truth is the best way to live.
-English is not a great language in which to easily summarize deep truth.
The above points (except for the English part) were summarized in Japan by the monk Nichiren in the 13th century.
His version is so high octane, that it takes years for people to discard their disbelief, even when they get phenomenal results in their life by reciting the formula in Japanese-Nam Myoho Renge Kyo- and joining with others who also have the same observations that underlie your question. It's one thing to be smart and frustrated, it is another to decide to try an extremely effective method of arranging the world to delete the need for your question. Results are better than frustration.
Source(s):
My own experiences in seeing phenomenal changes as a result of reciting the formula and following the recommendations of the local SGI people with more experience in changing the world..
sgi.org

sure but that takes $$$$$$$$$$$$
so lets PRAY FOR GODS KINGDOM!!!!!!

wisely spoken…..but after been living in japan over 15 years there are very few results and thats very frustrating…..why cant they seem to fully accept the gaijins living in their over-precious country…..japan NOWADAYS has a lot of issues,one of them they should NOT favor the japanese above all others

what happened to co exist?

You mean, like, in Sim City? it doesn't work in real life. In real life, there are people who love and others that hate with guns.

That's a lot of responsibility. What if i can't blame anyone else anymore? What if I have to examine what i did to bring about my current situation?. that seems like being an architect of my own life.

The operative word here seems to be rebuild. it assumes that one has a wreck to start with. From birth we are always building with the materials available to us. Some are fortunate enough to be given a hammer and nails, others need to scavenge around to find appropriate building materials and still others can't even recognize the tools if they're right in front of them. Any of these scenarios can be successful depending on the perception of the "builder". No matter how ambitious the goal, the ultimate prize is peace of mind regardless of society's definition of success. one person may want to build a house from the ground up and another may look at it as a prison, keeping him in one place, preferring the freedom of a vagabond lifestyle and total freedom. There is no formula for how to live a life.