Military & Aerospace Electronics

| Add RSS Feed

LSI upgrades Sandia Supercomputer with storage
By Courtney E. Howard

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.–Engineers at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, N.M., are upgrading Red Storm, one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers, with high-performance storage.

Engineers at Sandia, home to a stockpile of U.S. nuclear weapons intelligence, sought to boost the performance and reliability of the firm’s Red Storm supercomputer. They needed to update Red Storm not only to better meet the computing demands of nuclear weapons simulations, but also to provide reliable, consistent service.

“National laboratories use supercomputers to answer some of the nation’s most complex scientific and engineering questions,” says Jim Tomkins, a senior scientist/engineer at Sandia. “In the case of Red Storm, we use it to run simulations that help us understand what is going on in a variety of complex areas.”

Sandia engineers installed 20 InfiniteStorage 4600 storage solutions, able to store more than 1.8 petabytes of scientific data, from SGI in Sunnyvale, Calif. The SGI InfiniteStorage 4600 is based on the Engenio 7900 HPC storage system from LSI Corp. in Milpitas, Calif.

“Storage is a key part of the overall system,” Tomkins adds. “It allows computations to be completed even though failures have occurred in the computer system, and is also used to store the simulation results so that they can be examined later.”


Click here to enlarge image


Red Storm is a massively parallel processor computer jointly developed by Cray Inc. and Sandia National Laboratories, part of the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration.

Engineers selected the 4600 solution based on its ability to deliver a sustained data transfer rate of 70 gigabytes per second, as well as continuous access to the system’s disk storage with no loss of user data for a period of more than eight weeks.

“Storage performance is critical to maximizing supercomputing efficiency,” says Steve Hochberg, senior director of the high-performance computing (HPC) segment at LSI. The newly installed storage system is expected to decrease the system down time of the Red Storm, capable of more than 280 teraflops (trillion floating point operations per second).

“Few scientific missions are more crucial to national security than the continuous monitoring of our nuclear arsenal,” admits Kurt Kuckein, InfiniteStorage product line manager at Silicon Graphics. SGI worked with LSI and Abba Technologies in Albuquerque, N.M., to deliver a high-performance storage solution to Sandia that will “reliably meet their needs today, while providing a solid foundation for future projects,” he says.

For more information, visit SGI, LSI Corp., or Abba Technologies online at www.sgi.com, www.lsi.com, and www.abbatech.com, respectively.

Military & Aerospace Electronics December, 2008
Author(s) :   Courtney E. Howard


| Add RSS Feed


 
Return to Previous Page

 
 





 

Military & Aerospace Electronics Webcasts






Thermal Management: Keeping It Cool in Military Systems
November 16, 2009










The VPX STANDARD and Its Use in Military Applications
Original broadcast on
July 29, 2009












Implementing High Performance Embedded Applications with RapidIO Switching and High Performance Multicore DSPs
Original broadcast on
April 29, 2009





More
 
Sponsored White Papers Library
Recently Added White Papers

File System Considerations in a Multi-Core RTOS Environment (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Pilatus PC-21 - the trainer aircraft for the 21st century (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Integrated VXS SIGINT Digital Receiver/Processor (10/23/2009, Curtiss-Wright Controls Embedded Computing)

Rugged VME and CompactPCI hardware platform controls multiple unmanned aircraft (09/29/2009, Kontron)

Kontron supplies multi-processor VME solution to power the world's most accurate satellite navigation system (09/29/2009, Kontron)

More