The K computer - named for the Japanese word "kei" (?), meaning 10 quadrillion (1016) - is a supercomputer manufactured by Fujitsu, currently installed at the Riken Advanced Institute for Computational Science campus in Kobe, Hy?go Prefecture, Japan. The K computer is based on a distributed memory architecture with over 80,000 compute nodes. It is used for a variety of applications, including climate research, disaster prevention and medical research. The K computer's operating system is based on the Linux kernel, with additional drivers designed to make use of the computer's hardware.
In June 2011, TOP500 ranked K the world's fastest supercomputer, with a computation speed of over 8 petaflops, and in November 2011, K became the first computer to top 10 petaflops. It had originally been slated for completion in June 2012. In June 2012, K was superseded as the world's fastest supercomputer by the American IBM Sequoia. As of June 2017, K is the world's eighth-fastest computer, with the Chinese Sunway TaihuLight and Tianhe-2 being the fastest supercomputers.
As of November 2017, the K computer still holds the first place for the HPCG benchmark, since November 2011 introduction of the benchmark list.
Video K computer
Performance
On 20 June 2011, the TOP500 Project Committee announced that K had set a LINPACK record with a performance of 8.162 petaflops, making it the fastest supercomputer in the world at the time; it achieved this performance with a computing efficiency ratio of 93.0%. The previous record holder was the Chinese National University of Defense Technology's Tianhe-1A, which performed at 2.507 petaflops. The TOP500 list is revised semiannually, and the rankings change frequently, indicating the speed at which computing power is increasing. In November 2011, Riken reported that K had become the first supercomputer to exceed 10 petaflops, achieving a LINPACK performance of 10.51 quadrillion computations per second with a computing efficiency ratio of 93.2%. K received top ranking in all four performance benchmarks at the 2011 HPC Challenge Awards.
On 18 June 2012, the TOP500 Project Committee announced that the California-based IBM Sequoia supercomputer replaced K as the world's fastest supercomputer, with a LINPACK performance of 16.325 petaflops. Sequoia is 55% faster than K, using 123% more CPU processors, but is also 150% more energy efficient. As of June 2013, the world's fastest supercomputer is China's Tianhe-2, capable of a LINPACK performance of over 33 petaflops.
On the TOP500 list, it became first on June 2011, falling down through time to lower positions, to tenth in November 2017.
K computer holds first place in the HPCG benchmark test proposed by Jack Dongarra, with 0.6027 HPCG PFLOPS in June 2017.
Maps K computer
Specifications
Node architecture
The K computer comprises 88,128 2.0 GHz eight-core SPARC64 VIIIfx processors contained in 864 cabinets, for a total of 705,024 cores, manufactured by Fujitsu with 45 nm CMOS technology. Each cabinet contains 96 computing nodes, in addition to six I/O nodes. Each computing node contains a single processor and 16 GB of memory. The computer's water cooling system is designed to minimize failure rate and power consumption.
Network
The nodes are interconnected by Fujitsu's proprietary Torus fusion (Tofu) interconnect. Tofu has a six-dimensional mesh/torus topology, a scalability of over 100,000 nodes, and full-duplex links that have a peak bandwidth of 10 GB/s (5 GB/s per direction). Each node is connected to its own InterConnect Controller (ICC) chip, which contains four Tofu interfaces (one for the node and three for connecting to other ICC chips) and a router. Tofu's six-dimensional mesh/torus topology is abstracted by software to appear as a three-dimensional torus; and is supported by a Tofu-optimized version of the open-source Open MPI Message Passing Interface library. Users can create application programs adapted to either a one-, two-, or three-dimensional torus network.
File system
The system adopts a two-level local/global file system with parallel/distributed functions, and provides users with an automatic staging function for moving files between global and local file systems. Fujitsu developed an optimized parallel file system based on Lustre, called the Fujitsu Exabyte File System (FEFS), which is scalable to several hundred petabytes.
Power consumption
Although the K computer reported the highest total power consumption of any 2011 TOP500 supercomputer (9.89 MW - the equivalent of almost 10,000 suburban homes), it is relatively efficient, achieving 824.6 GFlop/kW. This is 29.8% more efficient than China's NUDT TH MPP (ranked #2 in 2011), and 225.8% more efficient than Oak Ridge's Jaguar-Cray XT5-HE (ranked #3 in 2011). However, K's power efficiency still falls far short of the 2097.2 GFlops/kWatt supercomputer record set by IBM's NNSA/SC Blue Gene/Q Prototype 2. For comparison, the average power consumption of a TOP 10 system in 2011 was 4.3 MW, and the average efficiency was 463.7 GFlop/kW.
According to TOP500 compiler Jack Dongarra, professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Tennessee, the K computer's performance equals "one million linked desktop computers". The computer's annual running costs are estimated at US$10 million.
K Computer Mae rapid transit station
On 1 July 2011, Kobe's Port Island Line rapid transit system renamed one of its stations "K Computer Mae" (meaning "In front of K Computer") denoting its vicinity.
See also
- PRIMEHPC FX10
- Supercomputing in Japan
- Graph500
Notes
References
External links
- Riken Advanced Institute for Computational Science
- Riken Next-Generation Supercomputer R&D Center
- K computer: Fujitsu Global
- Fujitsu Scientific & Technical Journal, July 2012 (Vol. 48, No. 3, The K computer
- Special Interview: Taking on the Challenge of a 10-Petaflop Computer, Riken News, No. 298, April 2006.
- June 2017 Top 500
Source of the article : Wikipedia