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Named "Jacquard”, the Linux Networx system will provide computational resources to scientists from DOE national laboratories, universities and other research institutions to support a wide range of scientific disciplines including climate modelling, fusion energy, nanotechnology, combustion, astrophysics and life sciences. Established in 1974, NERSC is DOE's flagship facility for unclassified supercomputing.
The acceptance test included a 14-day availability test during which a select group of NERSC users were given full access to the Jacquard cluster to thoroughly test the entire system in production operation. Jacquard had a 99 percent availability uptime during the testing while users and scientists ran a variety of codes and jobs on the system. The thorough acceptance testing by NERSC ensures Jacquard is ready for a production environment for thousands of scientists and researchers across the nation.
"NERSC is the leading provider of computing resources for DOE's Office of Science, and this new system will provide valuable computational science support for a wide range of users, allowing them to run more detailed simulations with faster turnaround, thereby helping advance scientific discovery”, stated NERSC General Manager Bill Kramer.
The Jacquard system is one of the largest production InfiniBand-based Linux cluster systems and has met rigorous acceptance criteria for performance, reliability and functionality that are unprecedented for an InfiniBand-based cluster. Jacquard is the first system to deploy Mellanox 12X InfiniBand uplinks in its fat-tree interconnect, reducing network hot spots and improving reliability by dramatically reducing the number of cables required.
The system has 640 AMD 2.2 GHz Opteron processors devoted to computation, with the rest used for I/O, interactive work, testing and interconnect management. Jacquard has a peak performance of 2.8 trillion floating point operations per second (teraflop/s). Storage from DataDirect Networks provides 30 terabytes of globally available formatted storage.
"By delivering this system to NERSC, we've provided a highly productive computing system to over 2500 users nationwide”, stated Robert (Bo) H. Ewald, CEO of Linux Networx. "We are committed to providing NERSC with the most advanced high-performance computing system available and are thrilled that this system will be a key part of major research initiatives taking place throughout the country.”
Following the tradition at NERSC, the system was named for someone who has had an impact on science and/or computing. In 1801, Joseph-Marie Jacquard invented the Jacquard loom, which was the first programmable machine. The Jacquard loom used punched cards and a control unit that allowed a skilled user to program detailed patterns on the loom.
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