TeraGrid Gets an Upgrade 125
The Fun Guy writes to tell us The NSF has awarded $48 million to the University of Chicago to operate and expand TeraGrid over the next five years. TeraGrid is 'a national-scale system of interconnected computers that scientists and engineers are using to solve some of their most challenging problems. TeraGrid is the world's largest open computer, storage and networking system. Only the U.S. Department of Energy's weapons laboratories have larger systems, which are dedicated to classified research.' Currently, the TeraGrid's power is just over 60 teraflops.
But (Score:2, Funny)
Funny because of repetitive nature of the comment (Score:1)
In this case the comment is perceived as funny, on the next it can be perceived as redundant, troll or overrated.
Eww more chances to refine PI (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Eww more chances to refine PI (Score:4, Funny)
Yea, find out where is the recurring sequence of 424242....
Re:Eww more chances to refine PI (Score:2)
Re:Eww more chances to refine PI (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Eww more chances to refine PI (Score:1)
How does this... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How does this... (Score:2, Informative)
Tightly coupled problems just cannot be run efficiently even on clusters of workstations(COWs). It is the age old topic of using the right tool for the right job.
Re:How does this... (Score:2)
Provably non-parellelizable problems? (Score:2)
There are other problems where this is just out of the question... Tightly coupled problems just cannot be run efficiently even on clusters of workstations(COWs).
If I can grab you attention for just a sec: Do you know of any books [or treatises or papers] that deal with the question of whether [some given class of] problems might be provably non-parallelizable?
Heck, if you could just give me a few keywords to Google, I'd be really grateful.
Thanks.
Re:Provably non-parellelizable problems? (Score:2, Informative)
But a systematic framework? (Score:2)
Other things like large matrix multiplications or FFTs or N-body problems do not scale as well. In these cases as you subdivide the problem into smaller pieces for your larger number of machines, the computation on each processor will quickly become small while the communication between processors will become more significant.
But has anyone attempted to create a systematic [or systematizable] framework within which you might be able to prove that a certain problem was necessarily non-parallelizable?
Cf
Re:But a systematic framework? (Score:2, Interesting)
result = (a[0] * (a[1] * (a[2] * (a[3] *(....)))))
Note that I use * to represent some binary operator that satisfies non-associativity. I think that this algorithm may be provably non-parallelizable, since the innermost * operation must be performed before any other * operations. Thus no two * operations can be done at the same time, and thus none of the * operations can be parallelized. Furthe
Re:But a systematic framework? (Score:1)
Re:But a systematic framework? (Score:1)
The class of P-complete problems is widely held to be inherently sequential.
Proving P-completeness amounts to proving that your problem is sequentially solvable in polynomial time (membership in class P), and proving that it can be reduced to another P-complete problem in polylogarithmic time on a parallel machine. Thus, you can establish that it is at least as hard to parallelize as the other P-complete problems.
There is, to my knowledge, no formal proof tha
Re:How does this... (Score:2)
Just look at:
http://access.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Releases/09.19.05_Berk eley_L.html [uiuc.edu]
I mean, the Berkeley geophysics people had to build their own. So they called on NCSA people to help build them one.
If you have a limited budget, NSF fundig for most
I want one (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I want one (Score:1)
Re:I want one (Score:1)
Correction (Score:2)
Replace "challenging" with "Parralell"
Correction Correction (Score:1)
Replace "challenging" with "Parralell"
Replace "parralell" with "parallel"Re:Correction Correction (Score:2)
You would think they would check the spelling before committing to a user name. Of course I think many people name their children without knowing the first thing about English linguistics and that is a rather more important decision.
Re:Correction Correction (Score:1)
But the name was mispelled to get an AOL screen name many years ago.
PS. Anonymous coward, if you are going to waste your time defending/attacking people on
Imagine... (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Imagine... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Imagine... (Score:2)
Quick, everyone! (Score:4, Funny)
The Rise of the Machine (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The Rise of the Machine (Score:2)
Heh. Seriously if a computer gone bad ever traps me in a building, and tries to kill me off. The first thing I would do is take some power cords, cut them open, and wrap the stripped wires in them around each other. I would then go around the building, and plug those wire into any outlets I could find. The resultant short would ground the building's power eventually overloading the circuit breakers, and disabling all of the security devices that aren't o
Deadlocks (Score:2)
Just don't fry the comms kit so someone outside can hopefully come and find you...
Re:The Rise of the Machine (Score:2)
the mains plug is moulded and i'd think it would be damn near impossible to terminate mains flex in a rj45 and also i don't see any wires running down the rj45 though its hard to tell.
I think they just stuffed the mains flex into the boot of the rj45 without actually terminating it not really made an etherkiller.
Once that happens (Score:2)
They're upgrading to run... (Score:5, Funny)
Had to say it, sorry!
Sorry to burst your bubble, but... (Score:2)
Re:They're upgrading to run... (Score:2)
Too bad it only does DDOS and spam...
Re:They're upgrading to run... (Score:2)
...in order to run Virtual Tera Patrick... (Score:2, Funny)
Just wait... (Score:2)
Re:Just wait... (Score:1)
Re:Just wait... (Score:2)
just put xbox 360s together (Score:4, Funny)
hah .. you could just put 60 xbox 360s together to achieve that kind of power ..
xbox 360 specs [xbox.com]
Re:just put xbox 360s together (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft can say they get x amount of tflops, and lets pretend for a moment that theoretically they are telling the truth. In reality, things *never* get to their potentials because of bottlenecks, unless of course your building super computers and have millions to invest. Microsoft and Sony can play the TFlops game, but in the end they aren't that powerful (as ArsTechnica has reported based on developer comments, they are much closer to 2-3 times the current generation in power)
I know you were probably joking, but you were modded insigtful and I couldn't help myself.
Re:just put xbox 360s together (Score:5, Insightful)
* 9.6 billion dot product operations per second
9.6GFLOPS*60=576GFLOPS. That's not even remotely close to 1TFLOPS, let alone 60 TFLOPS. You're off by 2 orders of magnitude.
Re:just put xbox 360s together (Score:2)
Mod parent funny (Score:1)
Double-precision is all that matters in most scientific apps.
25*60 = 1500GFLOPs = 1.5TFLOPs
You'd need 2400 xbox360s to get to 60 TFLOPs.
Also, Xbox360s have 512MB of RAM. This would not make for a very useful cluster node.
Re:Mod parent funny (Score:2)
Department of Energy? (Score:2, Insightful)
...you know, developing sources of energy.
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:4, Funny)
Imagine if they used it to make ice cream!
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:1)
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:1)
I'm just suggesting that perhaps weapons could be left entirely to the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, and/or the military.
Then all of the power of that cluster would be available for energy-related research and analysis.
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:1)
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:2)
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:2)
Re:Department of Energy? (Score:2)
Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's just so
(And the only people who I say that to are my research group members and
The TeraGrid is well managed too.. very few problems for such a huge system.
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
In other words, suppose I threw a standard text processing job at it (trawl through 2 gigs of disparate log files, correlate, spit out unified log). Simple enough task and on the machine I use it takes about 4 minutes to complete. If I took that and ran it on the TeraGrid with no special thought to that environment (it's a single-threaded Perl script), would it r
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
Certain programs are more 'parallelizable' than others. The programs I run (and code) are very 'embarrassingly parallel'. That mean
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:1)
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
If you wanted to run 500 copies of your single-threaded Perl script, they'd probably all finish in about 4 minutes -- but that doesn't make very good use of the system. You could get the same results using something along the lines of SETI@Home or distributed.net.
What makes TeraGrid special is that it's a whole bunch of CPUs (along with lots of memory, disk, a
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
The TeraGrid is well managed too.. very few problems for such a huge system.
For $48 million, one should hope so. There are "national assets" of other federal agencies that don't get anywhere near that kind of funding for managing much more data. It really sounds like someone brought the bacon home from Congress.
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
Did you look at the price tag for IBM's Blue Gene or Japan's Earth Simulator? Yeah...much more than $48 mil.
And I can't use either of those nice government funded ones! Bastards. They won't even accept an allocation request.
"But I only want to use 15 000 processors for an hour!" Heh.
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
As an admin on the UC/ANL Teragrid cluster, I thank you for the compliment. Keep computin'!
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2)
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Every time I run a 500 proc batch job ... (Score:1, Insightful)
Actually it isn't. Each site has it's own way of doing things, its own software stack (NMI alleviates some of this), and its own particular configuration. It translates to a bunch of clusters interconnected by a high-bandwidth, low-latency network.
Ever ran a cross-site application?
I really hope ... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:I really hope ... (Score:2)
For one thing, the author seems to think that "Grid" and "TeraGrid" are the same thing. A Grid is a generic term for a set of computer resources, possibly spread across multiple administrative domains, working together using Grid software (such as Globus http://www.globus.org/ [globus.org]). The TeraGrid is one specific Grid project.
Beyond that, I don't know why he thinks the Department of Homeland Security has anything to do with this. The TeraGrid is not, as far
Imagine (Score:1)
Oh, wait...
Yeah, sure. (Score:1)
Re:What about the classified systems? (Score:2)
Havent we learned anything from Arnie? (Score:1)
$150 Million (Score:2)
This round of Teragrid funding is $150 Million. PSC [psc.edu] got $52 Million. The rest is split up among the other 7 institutions. The other major partners already got big awards under earlier rounds of funding.
Oh, and this news is a month old.
Yeah, but... (Score:1)
How does one get an account? (Score:2)
Terragrid on top500.org (Score:2)
Ranked: #1 Name: BlueGene/L eServer Blue Gene Solution, Owner: DOE/NNSA/LLNL, Country: United States, Year built: 2005, Number of processors: 65536, Manufacturer: IBM.
Is it kind of wierd that in
# define USHRT_MAX 65535
and
Re:Terragrid on top500.org (Score:1)
Re:Terragrid on top500.org (Score:1)
Re:Teragrid on top500.org (Score:2)
For various reasons, the number of nodes in a system is often conveniently some power of 2.
The fact that USHRT_MAX+1 and the number of nodes in the BlueGene/L system happen to be the same power of 2 is purely coincidental. It's conceivable, I suppose,
Terminator (Score:2)
Dept. of Energy? Weapons Computers?? (Score:1)
think ICBM, baby... http://www.sandia.gov/media/online.htm [sandia.gov]
Sounds Familiar (Score:1)
Re:not that impressive... (Score:2)