16-Teraflops, £97m Cray To Replace IBM At UK Meteorological Office 125
Memetic writes: The UK weather forecasting service is replacing its IBM supercomputer with a Cray XC40 containing 17 petabytes of storage and capable of 16 TeraFLOPS. This is Cray's biggest contract outside the U.S. With 480,000 CPUs, it should be 13 times faster than the current system. It will weigh 140 tons. The aim is to enable more accurate modeling of the unstable UK climate, with UK-wide forecasts at a resolution of 1.5km run hourly, rather than every three hours, as currently happens. (Here's a similar system from the U.S.)
Re: (Score:2)
Flawed assumption: everyone is a feckless whiny turd like you.
Re: (Score:2)
You checked it but we still know it's you, skid.
16 peta not tera FLOPS (Score:5, Informative)
16 peta not tera FLOPS
Re: (Score:2)
We need a law against journalists using numbers. It would be less misleading to have them report as:
"[...]a Cray XC40 containing much storage and capable of a large number of flops."
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, I thought what the heck? I could probably stuff 16 teraflops worth of compute power in a couple desktop machines, easy.
Re: (Score:3)
Less than 20 grand gets you a perfectly tuned 16 teraflop (single precision) "super computer".
Re: (Score:1)
I was going to say that a well-setup 2U hybrid CPU/GPU server would be capable of more than 8 TFLOPS (double precision). lol
And so in dishonor of Samzenpus (Score:1)
#cuethedeniers #poisoningthewell #climatedenialiscreationism #dontquestionclimatemodels #dontmentionthehiatus
Re: (Score:2)
I find it ironic that on one side they deny climat change, on the other - almost the same people build the ark.
Self (Score:1)
Dude, you're getting a CRAY, also error in summary (Score:5, Informative)
16 TFlops ain't much to write home about. 480,000 CPUS? What are they? 6502s?
Turns out it's 16PFlops according to the BBC.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
What, are you suggesting they fucking read the articles they're going to post? Or more absurdly yet, be broadly informed about the general goings on in technology?
One might even imagine that this headline, the weekly articles about the latest multi-teraflop figures from single GPUs, and some working synapses might have raised a SIGREDFLAG or something.
Re:Dude, you're getting a CRAY, also error in summ (Score:4)
Re: (Score:2)
Interesting that they're using E5s and not E7s
Probably something to do with yields and availability - buying 480,000 CPUs in one go is going to cause consternation, regardless of who your supplier is :) Getting 480,000 E5s in half the time it would take to get 480,000 E7s means you have less liability on the books for the duration (you have to hold delivered stock and down payments as liabilities), and a better cash flow.
Re: (Score:2)
It might also be that Intel has a bit too much capacity for E5s, and needs to utilize it. Unused semiconductor capacity is costly. Now don't get me wrong: this might simply be a case of more efficient capacity being available. E5s and E7s may be all made on the same equipment, but if said equipment makes E5s at half the cost of E7s, and you can sell them for more than half the cost of E7s, you really have more capacity in terms of what's sensible to use for ROI.
E7 actually not that interesting for HPC (Score:2)
E7 is useful for areas where extremely large memory per core is mandatory (some parts of HPC)
In general, E5 strikes the balance between having adequate amounts of cache and SMP interconnect, compute capability (Haswell E5 is available, E7 is still Ivy bridge, AVX2 being a big thing there), and per-unit cost (E7 carries a huge premium for its benefits, most of which are generally not needed in HPC of this scale).
Even in places where you do see E7, it's usually in a special portion of the cluster for big-memo
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Dude, you're getting a CRAY, also error in summ (Score:4, Informative)
Of course the mention of 6502 was a joke, but let's see how close one could get. Let's say that you could get one FLOP in 1000 cycles on a legacy 6502. With 2MHz clock, we're talking 2kFLOPs per chip. With half a million of them, we get 1GFLOP. That's still 7 orders of magnitude away from where one needs to be... This tells us, indirectly, that the desktop processors we currently have are essentially the realm of 1980s science fiction :)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Oh, and it uses a lot of lectricity stuff!
I'm deeply disappointed (Score:1)
I would have hoped that they would have a cluster of Raspberry Pis to do this instead.
PetaFLOPS ffs (Score:2, Informative)
Slashdot is getting worse by the minute.
Cray? (Score:3)
Re:Cray? (Score:4, Informative)
Cray Computer [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
The current Cray probably only keeps the logo of the original Cray. There was an additional purchase besides Tera that is not listed there.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I thought that architecture from Tera had been cancelled long enough. Never heard about much sales from it. It was interesting but if you read the description of what it does and think about how a modern GPU works you will see you are probably much better off buying COTS GPUs.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Twice, I think (Cray Laboratories and Cray Computer Corporation) though the name has been passed around a bit.
The current Cray (Which was formerly known as the Tera Computer Company) bought up the remnants of Cray Research from Silicon Graphics in 2000, who had bought them up in 1996, and appropriated the name.
Looks (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
As a British nerd (Score:5, Funny)
As a British nerd my 2 favourite topics of conversation are the weather and super computers, so this is exciting news.
Re:As a British nerd (Score:5, Funny)
You don't like trains? Weirdo!
Re: (Score:1)
I like trains. [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Only people who don't use trains like trains in the UK. The service is awful and extremely expensive.
Re: (Score:2)
Saw that on Fox, did you?
Re: (Score:2)
Sparse on Technical Details (Score:4, Informative)
I was interested in what the change-over was, which was causing the performance increase, and how old the existing system is. This information seems to be missing.
What is included actually sounds a little disappointing:
13x faster
12x as many CPUs
4x mass (3x "heavier")
I would have thought that there would be either a process win (more transistors per unit area and all that fun) or a technology win (switching to GPUs or other vector processors, for example) but it sounds like they are building something only marginally better per computational resource. I suppose that the biggest win is just in density (12x CPUs in 4x mass is pretty substantial) but I was hoping for a little more detail. Or, given the shift in focus toward power and cooling costs, what impact this change will have on the energy consumption over the old machine.
Then again, I suppose this isn't a technical publication so the headline is the closest we will get and it is more there to dazzle than explain.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The speed of these large supercomputers is based less on processors and more on the networking between the nodes. To have a linear response in performance at 13x the number of processors is pretty impressive capability.
What difference will it make? (Score:1)
There's been times were the forecast for 30mins away was wrong. Half a million chips cant be cheap, I thought we were in a time of austerity, this clearly doesn't benefit the UK economy. Money would have been better spent in researching better methods of forecasting rather than trying and failing to brute force weather forecasting.
Re:What difference will it make? (Score:5, Informative)
UK weather forecasts have become much more accurate over the last few decades as the computers that do the forecasting have become more powerful. This new machine will continue that trend.
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/media/image/7/2/capIndPlot-600.jpg [metoffice.gov.uk]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The hardware is the cheap part - coming up with better algorithms is akin to mathematical breakthroughs these days...
Re: (Score:2)
Even if that's true that the algorithms are pretty much unchanged, that the accuracy gets better when throwing resources at the problem probably means the algorithm is working as intended.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
In the end, you have to do those additions and multiplications, there's nothing to be more efficient about. All those computations run on a grid, and the elements in the grid can approximate effects of various orders (think polynomial orders). Up to a certain point, increasing the order of individual elements decreases the net amount of computations done, since the increase in number of computations within an element is outcompensated by the decrease in the needed number of elements. At a certain point, you
Re: (Score:2)
I should probably say that it speaks to the incredible flexibility and scalability of our grid-based methods that they even can be scaled in such a fashion. Some numerical methods simply don't scale at all, and throwing more computational power at them gives slower-than-linear increases in accuracy or decreases in computation time. For example, good luck with scaling up the grade-school long multiplication, or with single-polynomial approximations that span more than a dozen points...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not everything in the world can be solved by clever software.
Re: (Score:2)
Eh quite a bit of industry where even small impovements in weather forecasting are extremely valuable.
Re: (Score:2)
Cameron shot that one out of the water when he promised to victims of the floods last winter: "MONEY IS NO OBJECT."
Some of us have long memories.
Re: (Score:2)
And how is improved forecasting going to really help here, when you get past the platitudes? Is the transportation and rescue infrastructure up to par to cope with the evacuations prior to a forecast flooding? I somehow doubt it is. But feel free to prove me wrong, of course.
Re:What difference will it make? (Score:4, Insightful)
You do more than rescue. When you know the storm is coming you prepare ahead of time. With 3-5 days notice, Councils, police cancel overtime. All vehicles are out of the garage/repair shop. Priority on getting sandbags in place, clearing all drains and drain covers.
Then the general public are warned. Less events are on, or they are cancelled. Less people travel, everyones been to the shops two days before.
And away from storms, farmers know 5 days in advance what they're doing; warm humid weather means preparing for blight, etc. Less fertlilizers, less pesticides are wasted.
People still grumble about the bad weather, but harvests and lives aren't lost.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh look, it's another small minded Little Endlander with their "I don't understand it, it doesn't benefit me directly and it costs money, so it must be bad". See also HS2.
It benefits the UK economy massively. It allows shipping & aircraft companies to make sensible decisions like "Should we have the snowplows on standby tonight?" and "Should we wait in port while that storm passes?". It benefits farmers by giving them more accurate long-range forecasts so t
A little perspective (Score:2)
97 million pounds is a pittance in a 731 billion budget [ukpublicspending.co.uk]. An Eurofighter Typhoon costs 110 million (marginal cost, not factoring R&D in).
Re: (Score:2)
bad summary. Or bad BBC. Or both. (Score:1)
According to the BBC broadcasts yesterday, the system is £67 million worth of iron. Good deal if you can play Doom on it.
Fuck-all good that's going to do, if they can't predict the weather with any accuracy on this planet - how the fuck did NASA do it in the 80's to predict the weather TWO WEEKS in advance for NEPTUNE so they knew where to point the cameras?? I'm pretty fucking sure my current LAPTOP has even more grunt than their entire server farm had...!
Re: (Score:2)
The grid that NASA used for those Neptune weather predictions probably had a cell the size of a large Earth country, or a small Earth continent. Neptune is fucking big.
16-Terraflops needed?? (Score:1)
To tell which of the UK's three weather conditions (rainy, cloudy, or foggy) it's gonna be?
Re:16-Terraflops needed?? (Score:4, Informative)
You joke, but our weather has been getting less predictable. We had a fairly hot summer overall, but August was fairly wet and dull. September, on the other hand, was the driest on record, and October has mostly been warm. It's forecast to reach 20 degrees in London on Friday - if that was one day later, on the 1st of November, it would be challenging the record for the hottest November day recorded in the UK.
Monday and Tuesday were warm enough to sit outside on my lunch break, today it's raining and chilly, tomorrow it's back up to 19 degrees apparently.
Re: (Score:2)
16 PFlops! (Score:2)
Now dat just Cray.
16 TeraFLOPs record! (Score:2)
Better than 2000's ASCI White [top500.org], but worse than 2002's Earth Simulator [top500.org]. 13 years back to the past!
Or maybe the actual performance is 16 PetaFLOPs, as the linked article states.
As someone who lives in the UK... (Score:1)
...I could predict the weather for the same price.
Rain, rain and more rain.
How many Kilowatts? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Enough electricity to run 37 bowling alleys.
Re: (Score:1)
obligatory (Score:3)
Does it run Linux?
Not mentioned in TFA, and I haven't seen anyone talk about it yet in the comments here. Or maybe the answer is so obviously 'yes' that nobody even talks about it anymore.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it runs linux.
Cray Linux® Environment (includes SUSE Linux SLES11, HSS and SMW software)
Extreme Scalability Mode (ESM) and Cluster Compatibility Mode (CCM)
system specs [cray.com]
After it is installed ... (Score:2)
predicting the weather will be a breeze ....
Tomorrow (Score:1)
And the U.S. falls further behind (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The current NWS computer is only capable of 0.21 petaflops [blogspot.com].
And no source for his (Cliff Mass's) claim of performance. As far as I know the US National Weather Service (NWS) in fact operates multiple clusters, I don't think they have any classic singular "supercomputers," but then again neither does anyone else anymore, since the original Cray supercomputer heydays.
The various models are run on several clusters AFAIK. I believe North American Mesoscale, NAMS and Global Forecast System, GFS may run on the primary operational cluster, but I was under the impression th
Cray® XC40 utilize the Cray Linux® Envir (Score:1)
Who is Soulskill? (Score:2)
If Soulskill doesn't know the difference between TFLOP and PFLOP, what is he doing posting articles here?
Can this stuff be farmed out? (Score:2)
Cloud computing can run multiple copies of Office and host a website but when you need real horsepower, you get a supercomputer.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, this is misconception. The cloud can probably deliver 16Pflops. The problem with the cloud is not computation power. It is communication bandwidth and latency.
What makes a supercomputer is the balance between processing capability, communication capability and IO speed. For many applications, you need to be able to synchronize the processors with very little overhead. Many scientific application work under the following patterns: do a small computation, make a small communication with your neighbo
Re: (Score:2)
Supercomputer are in a class by themselves.
Re: (Score:2)
so all the people using the amazon ec2 to run bitcoin and later altcoin/flavor of the month alt coin clones to make money aren't using cpu power? i looked into altcoins and it is pretty clear each coin launch is a huge way to launder 10 million in money easily.. and ec2 cloud computing is recommended for that use. criminals also use it to get gold and silver in exchange for their mined coins.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Sure they could do that, but there's simply no cloud provider out there who has sufficient connectivity for the needs of a supercomputing system. The stuff one runs on a supercomputer would completely saturate the normal "cloud" datacenter interconnect, while leaving the nodes hopelessly underutilized. Serving web apps and doing large-scale computations have very different scalability requirements. That's why it's easy to scale a big cloud storage/app serving facility, while it's really hard to scale a supe
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The so-called big data can replicate the "data" to each node, thus alleviating the interconnect requirements - most "big data" analytics is highly parallelizable with no interconnect. When you're doing big matrix inversions, the communications needs scale with the number of matrix elements...