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| The global publication of record for High Performance Computing / August 29, 2003: Vol. 12, No. 34 | |
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Cluster Computing:SGI ALTIX 3000 PERFORMANCE LEAD ROLLS ON
Based on the latest available results published on www.spec.org, SGI Altix once again screams past all other competing 64-processor and 32-processor systems, including systems from HP, Sun Microsystems and Fujitsu Ltd. Instrumental in making these world record results possible were recent enhancements to version 7.1 of the Intel Fortran and C++ Compilers for Linux.
"With these results, SGI Altix 3000 continues to reign unchallenged as the fastest, most scalable system available for data-intensive scientific, technical and creative environments," said Dave Parry, senior vice president and general manager, Server and Platform Group, SGI. "By focusing on the needs of users in these markets, SGI and the Linux community have worked together to catapult Linux into the once cost-prohibitive realm of supercomputers and superclusters. The result is a family of systems that break performance records again and again, while providing unparalleled price/performance to an ever-growing population of customers." In January, SGI announced the SGI Altix 3000 family of servers and superclusters, which combine SGI supercomputing architecture with Intel Itanium 2 processors and the Linux operating system. SGI Altix 3000 is recognized as the first Linux cluster that scales up to 64 processors within each node and the first cluster to allow global shared-memory access across nodes. Inspired by the success of the SGI Altix family and the powerful combination of standard Linux running on 64-bit Intel processors, more than 60 high-performance manufacturing, science, energy and environmental applications have been ported by their commercial developers to the 64-bit Linux environment. Over two thirds of these applications have certified and optimized their code for differentiated performance on the Altix platform. Availability SGI Altix 3000 systems are available today in single-system configurations of 4 to 64 processors, and supercluster configurations of 4 to 128 processors. For customers demanding even larger Altix superclusters, SGI will be supporting configurations of 256 processors in August 2003 and 512 processors in October 2003. SGI also recently announced plans to extend the industry-leading scalability of its SGI Altix 3000 servers to encompass a record 128 processors within a single instance of the Linux operating environment. Additional Altix system technical and availability information is posted on http://www.sgi.com/servers/altix. Competitive benchmark results stated above reflect results published on http://www.spec.org as of August 20, 2003. Comparisons are based on the best performing and similarly configured 128-cpu,64-cpu and 32-cpu servers currently shipping by HP, Sun and Fujitsu. 64-cpu Altix 3000 results were achieved in tests run by SGI, in accordance with SPEC guidelines "Run and Reporting Rules for SPEC OMP2001," on August 19, 2003, and have been submitted to SPEC for review. For testing dates and sources of results on competitive systems, and for the latest SPEC OMPM2001 benchmark results, visit http://www.spec.org/omp/results/ompm2001.html. For more information on the SPEC OMPM2001 benchmark suite and the definition of SPECompM2001, visit http://www.spec.org/hpg/omp2001/docs/faq.html. About SGI
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