The rationale behind this open-source release is to allow researchers free access to the body of research and development that created the most scalable, Linux-based, off-the-shelf computer available, says Sandia manager Neil Pundit.
The hope, says Pundit, is that modifications and enhancements made by researchers elsewhere will enrich the system software, and that these improvements will be communicated back to Sandia.
While other cluster software may run faster, none exceed the Cplant system softwares ability to help off-the-shelf processors work together in large numbers.
Sandias Cplant hardware comprises the largest known sets of Linux clusters for parallel computing. These sets are made up of Compaq Alpha processors and Myrinet interconnects. The largest cluster within Cplant comprises more than 1500 Alpha nodes.
Cplant system software is modeled after the system software that Sandia developed for the highly successful ASCI Red supercomputer built by Intel, installed at the Labs Albuquerque site in 1997, and for several years generally agreed to be the worlds fastest computer.
The software can be downloaded from the Cplant website at http://www.cs.sandia.gov/cplant/.
The Department of Energy (DOE) and National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) funded this research under the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI). DOE/NNSA expects mutual benefit from this release for the high-performance computing community and the DOE/NNSA ASCI community.
This first open source release of the Cplant system software is named Release 1.0 and totals approximately 43 MB. Requesters must agree to software licensing terms before downloading.