HPCwire

Leading HPC Solution Providers


The Leading Source for Global News and Information Covering the Ecosystem of High Productivity Computing

Leading HPC
Solution Providers























HPCwire >> Features

Twins Separated at Birth: Cloud Computing, HPC and How Microsoft Is Trying To Change How We Think About Scale


Page:  1  of  3
1 | 2 | 3   All  »  

When Dan Reed joined Microsoft in late 2007, his writings and public appearances made it clear that he hadn't totally abandoned HPC -- on his blog he continued to feature issues important to our community. But in the stream of posts on everything from the rise of multicore processors to national science policy, he never said exactly what he was doing at Microsoft. I assumed he was doing something related to Windows HPC Server or the entry of Microsoft in the HPC market, but then why was he in the research group? Perhaps a new product.

We found out on Feb. 24 when Rick Rashid, the senior vice president of Microsoft Research, unveiled the Cloud Computing Futures (CCF) organization at TechFest, and pointed to Reed as its director.

The CCF complements Microsoft's production cloud services, named "Windows Azure," announced in late October of last year, but in a broader sense is aiming to transform the way we build and manage very large-scale computational resources. As Reed writes on his blog, he came to run the CCF to answer the challenge of constructing a reliable, purpose-built cloud infrastructure, one not cobbled together from parts built for other tasks:

Imagine a world where heterogeneous multicore processors are design and optimized for diverse workloads, where solid state storage changes our historical notions of latency and bandwidth, where on-chip optics, system interconnects and LAN/WAN networking simplify data movement, where scalable systems are resilient to component failures, where programming abstractions facilitate functional dispersion across devices and facilities, where new applications are developed more quickly and efficiently. This can be.

But as he points out, we have a long way to go to get to this future from where we are today:

If we built utility power plants the same way we build cloud infrastructure, we would start by visiting The Home Depot and buying millions of gasoline-powered generators. This must change.

Much of the press around the CCF announcement has been about the server research agenda, and CCF demonstrations at TechFest showed off low power, low footprint, cloud compute clusters built from netbook processors (like the Intel Atom; you might recall that SGI also showed an experimental Atom-based server at SC08) along with innovative power and capacity management software. Next-generation storage and memory, new processor architectures, networks, and programming models are all also on the table as part of the CCF research agenda.

At its core, cloud computing is about building (and managing) computationally-based services at a very large scale, and so it shares some of the basic issues that have motivated the supercomputing community for decades. But, other than scale, do HPC and the cloud have anything in common? What does HPC bring to the table from its comparatively long history that will be important as cloud infrastructure becomes an industry and research area of its own? HPCwire talked to Dr. Reed by email, and he shared some of his thoughts about the intersection of cloud computing and HPC.

HPCwire: What is the big picture view of the CCF?

Dr. Reed: The CCF story is about approaching cloud computing infrastructure as an integrated design problem, looking at the balance of support infrastructure, computing hardware and software, not only at a single site but across an international network of interconnected sites. The scale and scope of the problem means that some of our traditional design assumptions no longer hold, particularly if we want to enable a new class of applications.

Based on my background in high-performance computing, I believe clouds open exciting possibilities to rethink computational science and address some of the problems we face. We have successfully leveraged commodity hardware to create large clusters, but at considerable cost. Cluster programming remains difficult at scale. We have turned a generation of researchers into parallel programmers and system administrators; institutions are struggling with rising demands for machine space, power and cooling; and duplicated facilities make sharing expertise and data difficult. I helped make many of those things happen, so I feel some responsibility to help us find a new path.

The specific aspect relative to HPC is that cloud services are game changers, just as commodity clusters were a decade ago and graphics accelerators have been recently. This is not the future, this is the present.

Page:  1  of  3
1 | 2 | 3   All  »  

Article Tools

  • Print This Page
  • Bookmark This Article

Share Options

(Digg, Technorati, more)


Subscribe

Discussion

There are 0 discussion items posted.  

HPC in the Cloud


Top Headlines

Europe Jumps Into HPC Fray With Aurora

Nov 25 | InternetNews.com | A company known for wearable PCs comes out with its own supercomputer design. Read more...

Imagination Preps GPU/CPU Compilers for Parallel Processing

Nov 24 | EE Times UK | Company aims to ease programming for heterogeneous chips. Read more...

Cat Fight Brews Over Cat Brain

Nov 24 | IEEE Spectrum | EPFL's Henry Markram belittles brain simulation claims by IBM researcher. Read more...

AMD's 2010/2011 Roadmap from the IT Professional’s Perspective

Nov 24 | AnandTech | AMD plots its Opteron strategy. Read more...

Shared Supercomputing and Everyday Research

Nov 23 | The New York Times | Scientists look to democratize research via cloud computing. Read more...

Featured Whitepapers

High Performance Made Simple: The 10 Gigabit Ethernet Cluster

Sep 29 | | This white paper will outline the procedure for designing a green high performance HPC cluster using Appro GreenBlades™, Intel® Xeon® 5500 processor series (codename Nehalem), Arista 10 Gigabit Ethernet switches, and the Rocks+ software from Clustercorp.

Multimedia

Webcast: High Performance Computing for a Smarter Planet

LIVE@SCO9: The IBM team discusses new innovations in hardware, software and services that help clients better understand their workloads and get insight from their R&D efforts. Technology demonstrations include the soon-to-be-released Power7 HPC processor, the DCS990 system with 2.4 petabytes of storage, the xCAT management tool, secure HPC cloud computing and more. Winners of two HPCwire Readers' and Editors’ Choice Awards! Take the IBM virtual tour at SC09 or more information go online to: http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/deepcomputing/sc09.html

Webcast: Convey's Hybrid-Core Computers

LIVE@SCO9: Bruce Toal, CEO, President and Co-Founder of Convey Computer demonstrates how their hybrid-core computing technology delivers significantly higher performance at much lower power. And how, with their proprietary adaptive architecture, servers can dynamically and transparently reload different "personalities” that are optimized for different applications. Convey (www.conveycomputer.com) was presented with an HPCwire Editors’ Choice Award as a top vendor “positioned to lead FPGAs out of the HPC wilderness”. Take a look at their virtual booth video live from SC09.

Webcast: Supercomputers on Wheels

LIVE@SCO9: Fabio Gallo, VP and Director for Extreme Computing at Bull (winners of two HPCwire Readers' and Editors' Choice Awards) discusses Mobull – the new mobile data center solution featuring significant processing power, very high levels of density and flexibility, and rapid implementation. See all the Bull SCO9 announcements online at www.bull.com and take a look at this live video right from the show floor in Portland, OR.

SC09 HPC in the Cloud

Newsletters

Stay informed! Subscribe to HPCwire email Newsletters.






HPC Job Bank


Featured Events