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Japan Hardware

Japan's Fujitsu and RIKEN Have Dropped the SPARC Processor in Favor of an ARM Design Chip Scaled Up For Supercomputer Performance (ieee.org) 40

Japan's computer giant Fujitsu and RIKEN, the country's largest research institute, have begun field-testing a prototype CPU for a next-generation supercomputer they believe will take the country back to the leading position in global rankings of supercomputer might. From a report: The next-generation machine, dubbed the Post-K supercomputer, follows the two collaborators' development of the 8 petaflops K supercomputer that commenced operations for RIKEN in 2012, and which has since been upgraded to 11 petaflops in application processing speed. Now the aim is to "create the world's highest performing supercomputer," with "up to one hundred times the application execution performance of the K computer," Fujitsu declared in a press release on 21 June. The plan is to install the souped-up machine at the government-affiliated RIKEN around 2021. If the partners achieve those execution speeds, that would place the Post-K machine in exascale territory (one exaflops being a billion billion floating point operations a second). To do this, they have replaced the SPARC64 VIIIfx CPU powering the K computer with the Arm8A-SVE (Scalable Vector Extension) 512-bit architecture that's been enhanced for supercomputer use, and which both Fujitsu and RIKEN had a hand in developing. The new design runs on CPUs with 48 cores plus 2 assistant cores for the computational nodes, and with 48 cores plus 4 assistant cores for the I/O and computational nodes. The system structure uses 1 CPU per node, and 384 nodes make up one rack.
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Japan's Fujitsu and RIKEN Have Dropped the SPARC Processor in Favor of an ARM Design Chip Scaled Up For Supercomputer Performanc

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  • For many years my daily driver was a M3000 Fujitsu 4 core 2.86Ghz SPARCVII with 64GB of RAM and a internal RAID disk running Solaris 10. It still would be too had my employer not moved to a combination of Windows and Linux. Very reliable, scalable, hardware and OS.
  • FTA: "30 to 40 megawatts..."

    "first, a feeble spark, next a flickering flame, then a mighty blaze, ever increasing in speed and power." - Nikola Tesla

  • K was listed at number 10 in Nov-2017 benchmark and about 1/9th the speed of the fastest machine. But on HPCG benchmark (http://www.hpcg-benchmark.org ), it was listed number 1. Even now, it is number 2 behind the Summit in HPCG. Not bad for a computer debuted in 2011. Hope they can maintain performance on HPCG as well.

    The proposed computer's LINPACK power efficiency is good but not that impressive. Summit is 8.8 MW and proposed computer is 8 times faster at about 4-5 times power consumption. So efficiency

  • Remember over a decade ago when people were claiming that Apple replacing PowerPC CPUs for Intel CPUs would never ever happen?

    We still have people here on Slashdot and on Mac-related forums claiming that Apple will never ever replace Intel CPUs with their own ARM CPUs.

    We now have supercomputers built with ARM CPUs. Given Apple's love of computing-power-to-watts ratios, and their need to control as many parts of their hardware as possible, it's only a matter of time. ARM-powered Macs are coming.

    • You mean we have ARM based supercomputers planned or being built.... are there any running yet?

    • Maybe you're right, but not for the reasons you state:

      We now have supercomputers built with ARM CPUs.

      Yes, but we also have SPARC powered supercomputers and we haven't had SPARC laptops since Tadpole in the 1990s. What makes for a good supercomputer and a good laptop are quite different things. Part of what makes for a good supercomputer is a fast, very wide floating point unit. But even more, supercomputers live and die on the interconnect. One thing you'll notice is that The Riken, stil very competetive

  • You will be armsimilated. All your Linux are belong to us.
  • That was the glow-in-the-darek, go as fast as possible, not-parallel-enough Intel-like kludge. if you want a good SPARC, look at the T5. The T5 was small, cool, heavily parallel and utterly not what Oracle wanted (;-))

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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