The Leading Source for Global News and Information Covering the Ecosystem of High Productivity Computing
June 23, 2006
The OpenFabrics Alliance (OFA), formerly OpenIB Alliance, has announced the first release of the OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution (OFED) for Linux; that IBM as a new member that will support OFA software; and the creation of the OpenFabrics Interoperability Working Group (IWG).
OpenFabrics Alliance will be discussing these developments at its first European Workshop in Paris, June 22-23, 2006, http://openfabrics.org/conference/june2006paris/.
Successful adoption of 10 Gb and 20 Gb InfiniBand fabrics in high performance compute clusters has sparked interest in using industry standard, high performance RDMA fabrics in enterprise grid computing. A robust, open source software stack for RDMA fabrics will accelerate adoption in grid and blade computing. The OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution enables customers to deploy an open source software stack for common cluster interconnect, storage and networking protocols. Customers can deploy new RDMA networking fabrics and be assured that their software investment is protected.
"Adoption of InfiniBand has grown rapidly in the high performance computing interconnect market," said Addison Snell, IDC's Research Director of High Performance Computing. "The market availability of a single, multi-vendor supported software stack will help enterprise users to realize the benefits of an RDMA-based interconnect and will accelerate adoption in the corporate data center."
OpenFabrics Welcomes IBM joining the Alliance
"Our membership in the OpenFabrics Alliance complements IBM's co-founding of the RDMA and InfiniBand technologies employed in OFED 1.0," said Dr. Tom Bradicich, IBM Fellow and Chief Technology Officer, IBM System x and BladeCenter Servers, and co-chair of the InfiniBand Trade Association. "As another advancement added to the vast open communities around IBM's server platforms, the common stack across RDMA technologies will afford more customer choice in our high performance and deep computing solutions."
"We believe the consolidation of interconnect technologies and network fabrics into one software stack is critical to the future expansion of blades and servers for both high performance computing and traditional enterprise applications," said Terri Hall, Vice President of Software Alliances for AMD. "As fabric bandwidth increases, applications need guaranteed scalability. RDMA-capable fabrics improve the end-to-end efficiency and scaling while lowering processing overhead and are great complements to AMD processor-enabled solutions."
OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution Released
The OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution 1.0 release (OFED 1.0) is the culmination of work by multiple manufacturers collaborating together to develop a well-tested, open source solution. OFED 1.0 will be distributed by Novell and Red Hat as well as several OpenFabrics members. The first release supports InfiniBand (iWARP support is in development). OFED helps ensure a customer's software investment is "future proofed" from vendor or technology lock-in.
"The OpenFabrics Enterprise Distribution enables customer choice by offering one set of universal application interfaces that use standard protocols for both InfiniBand and Ethernet," said Shawn Hansen, director of product management, Server Switching and Virtualization Business Unit at Cisco Systems, and chair of the OpenFabrics Enterprise Working Group. "The OFED Enterprise Distribution creates a single distribution of RDMA protocols that are tested and supported by multiple vendors, enabling data center IT administrators to choose the fabric best suited for any given application, while mitigating future risk."
OpenFabrics Interoperability Working Group Created
One of the key advantages of OpenFabrics is interoperability between vendors, eliminating barriers to entry for the ecosystem of partners look to adopt RDMA. These interoperability tests converge at University of New Hampshire Interoperability Laboratory (UNH-IOL) with work to develop a process and environment to create interoperable, enterprise-quality RDMA software. The OFA IWG has made the Interoperability Test Plan v0.8 available for download from the OFA website.
"UNH-IOL brings immediate credibility to the OFED testing by their unparalleled experience and extensive test facilities," said Tuan Phamdo, Director of Technology Initiative Enabling, Intel Corporation and Chair OFA Interoperability Working Group (IWG). "OFA has given our Working Group the charter to define and execute interoperability testing process, policy and procedure, for the OpenFabrics software stack. By working with UNH-IOL, OFA will ensure that OFED integrates into data center fabrics."
PSSC Labs PowerWulf Clusters Custom Configured HPC Solutions for Your Needs and Budget
PSSC Labs stands for Professional Service, Super Computers. Our mission bring a superior level of service and support to the HPC community.
FREE Download: "Going Parallel - An Implementation Guide"
Breakthrough performance for MATLAB®, Python and other desktop apps... Get 100X speedups, with less than 10% of the development time. Focus is on enabling familiar desktop tools to virtually execute on parallel servers, clusters, and grids.
The size and diversity of the HPC market in the United States supports a varied set of system providers and integrators. But in Europe, and the United Kingdom in particular, the market has a different shape.
Read More...
PRACE to evaluate petaflops prototypes; Acadamic roundtable discusses the computing industry's talent pool; and WRF benchmark data are released. John West recaps those stories and more in our weekly wrap-up.
Read More...
Since the first patent was issued for a Venetian statue in 1471, 60 million patents have been awarded around the world, with four million patents actively in force today worldwide. And 800,000 new inventions are registered every year. While the data is public, current search tools are inconvenient and inadequate to the needs of professionals. Semantic supercomputing techniques are helping researchers tackle this difficult challenge.
Read More...
Sep 05 | Uppsala University | Swedish researchers are revealing that "intelligent" computer-based methods for classifying patient samples is worthless when it comes to practical problems. Read more...
Sep 03 | Telegraph.co.uk | A new form of three dimensional scans could revolutionise brain surgery within a year, doctors claim. Read more...
Sep 03 | Linux Magazine | In HPC, most attention is paid to utilization and performance, rather than service availability and problem notification. This article focuses on the latter Read more...
Sep 03 | Nature News | What does it take to store bytes by the tens of thousands of trillions? Read more...
Sep 01 | Delaware Online | In the world of supercomputer-powered science, speed is everything, and an open road can lead to the promised land. Read more...
Sep 05 | | The excellent scalability features of Linux, in addition to robust security and performance makes it an excellent choice for server systems, especially in the high performance computing area.
Sep 01 | | The paper outlines the basic steps and tools involved in the process of migrating a desktop application to a parallel environment.
Jun 05 | | As pressure increases on the upstream seismic processing community to deliver ever-higher levels of productivity and efficiency, a new generation of storage solutions will be required that allow the maximum utilisation of high-performance computing (HPC) Linux cluster resources, together with the minimum of management overhead.
BlueArc's Titan architecture represents an evolutionary step in file servers by creating a hardware-based file system that can scale bandwidth, IOPS, and overall data capacity well beyond conventional software-based devices. With its ability to virtualize a massive storage pool of up to four usable petabytes of tiered storage, Titan can scale with growing data requirements, offering a competitive advantage for businesses, researchers, or other enterprises seeking to better manage data growth while still ensuring optimal performance.
Today, HPC organizations are requiring substantially more floating point performance to solve real-world problems. In this podcast, Ben Bennett, ClearSpeed General Manager, discusses how acceleration technology can improve the overall performance of standard x86-based systems...
Get updates and insights on the High Productivity Computing industry delivered driectly to your inbox.