Following on from their announcement last week that their K Computer
has increased its speed to over 10 Petaflops. Fujitsu has now announced
that their PRIMEHPC FX10 supercomputer is now theoretical computational
performance tops out at 23.2 petaflops based on deploying 98,304 nodes
across 1,024 racks. In comparison the K Computer can scale to 88,128
nodes across 864 racks.
Fujitsu explains:
"Combining high performance, scalability, and reliability with
superior energy efficiency, PRIMEHPC FX10 further improves on Fujitsu’s
supercomputer technology employed in the "K computer,” which achieved
the world’s top-ranked performance in
June 2011. All of the supercomputer’s components—from processors to
middleware—have been developed by Fujitsu, thereby delivering high
levels of reliability and operability. The system can be scaled to meet customer needs, up to a 1,024 rack configuration achieving a super-high speed of 23.2 PFLOPS.”
At its heart the FX10 uses a SPARC64 IXfx processor
running 16 cores at 1.848GHz. Memory capacity tops out at 64GB with a
bandwidth of 85GB/s or 5GB/s between nodes. In its highest configuration
the FX10 can be running a total of 6,291TB of memory. As you’d expect, the operating system is Linux based.
Fujitsu hopes to deploy fifty FX10 configurations over the next three
years with availability starting in January next year. For more
information on this beast of a system jump over to the Fujitsu website.
Source: Geek : Fujitsu |