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The Mont-Blanc prototype: an alternative approach for HPC systems

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Arquitectura de Computadors
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. CAP - Grup de Computació d'Altes Prestacions
Rajovic, Nikola
Rico, Alejandro
Mantovani, Filippo
Ruiz, Daniel
Vlarrubi, Josep O.
Gomez, Constantino
Backes, Luna
Nieto, Diego
Servat, Harald
Martorell Bofill, Xavier
Labarta Mancho, Jesús José
Ayguadé Parra, Eduard
Adeniyi-Jones, Chris
Derradji, Said
Gloaguen, Hervé
Lanucara, Piero
Sanna, Nico
Mehaut, Jean-François
Pouget, Kevin
Videau, Brice
Boyer, Eric
Allalen, Momme
Auweter, Axel
Brayford, David
Tafani, Daniele
Weinberg, Volker
Brömmel, Dirk
Halver, René
Meinke, Jan H.
Beivide Palacio, Ramon
Benito, Mariano
Vallejo, Enrique
Valero Cortés, Mateo
Ramirez, Alex
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Arquitectura de Computadors
Barcelona Supercomputing Center
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. CAP - Grup de Computació d'Altes Prestacions
Rajovic, Nikola
Rico, Alejandro
Mantovani, Filippo
Ruiz, Daniel
Vlarrubi, Josep O.
Gomez, Constantino
Backes, Luna
Nieto, Diego
Servat, Harald
Martorell Bofill, Xavier
Labarta Mancho, Jesús José
Ayguadé Parra, Eduard
Adeniyi-Jones, Chris
Derradji, Said
Gloaguen, Hervé
Lanucara, Piero
Sanna, Nico
Mehaut, Jean-François
Pouget, Kevin
Videau, Brice
Boyer, Eric
Allalen, Momme
Auweter, Axel
Brayford, David
Tafani, Daniele
Weinberg, Volker
Brömmel, Dirk
Halver, René
Meinke, Jan H.
Beivide Palacio, Ramon
Benito, Mariano
Vallejo, Enrique
Valero Cortés, Mateo
Ramirez, Alex
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

High-performance computing (HPC) is recognized as one of the pillars for further progress in science, industry, medicine, and education. Current HPC systems are being developed to overcome emerging architectural challenges in order to reach Exascale level of performance, projected for the year 2020. The much larger embedded and mobile market allows for rapid development of intellectual property (IP) blocks and provides more flexibility in designing an application specific system-on-chip (SoC), in turn providing the possibility in balancing performance, energy-efficiency, and cost. In the Mont-Blanc project, we advocate for HPC systems being built from such commodity IP blocks, currently used in embedded and mobile SoCs. As a first demonstrator of such an approach, we present the Mont-Blanc prototype; the first HPC system built with commodity SoCs, memories, and network interface cards (NICs) from the embedded and mobile domain, and off-the-shelf HPC networking, storage, cooling, and integration solutions. We present the system’s architecture and evaluate both performance and energy efficiency. Further, we compare the system’s abilities against a production level supercomputer. At the end, we discuss parallel scalability and estimate the maximum scalability point of this approach across a set of applications.<br />Peer Reviewed<br />Postprint (published version)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn969842617
Document Type :
Electronic Resource