This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2018) |
The Peloton supercomputer purchase was a program at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory intended to provide tera-FLOP computing capability using commodity Scalable Units (SUs). The Peloton RFP defined the system configurations.[1]
Appro was awarded the contract for Peloton which included the following machines:
Machine | Nodes | TPP (TFLops) |
---|---|---|
atlas | 1152 | 44.24 |
hopi | 80 | 2.92 |
minos | 864 | 33.18 |
rhea | 576 | 22.12 |
yana | 80 | 3.07 |
zeus | 288 | 11.06 |
All of the machines ran the CHAOS variant of Red Hat Enterprise Linux and the Moab resource management system. Under the project management of John Lee, the team at Synnex, Voltaire, Supermicro and other suppliers, the scientists were able to dramatically reduce the amount of time it took to go from starting the cluster build to actually having hardware at Livermore in production. In particular, it went from having four SUs on the floor on a Thursday, to bringing in two more SUs for the final cluster and by Saturday, having all of them wired up, burned in, and running Linpack.
The last Peloton clusters were retired in June 2012[2].
References
edit- ^ "Linux at Livermore". Archived from the original on 2018-06-16. Retrieved 2007-03-01.
- ^ "Linux Clusters Overview". Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Archived from the original on June 16, 2018. Retrieved November 10, 2024.