Wednesday, November 14th 2012

AMD FirePro Server Graphics Redefining Supercomputing Performance

AMD has collaborated with the University of Frankfurt's Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) to deliver a new standard in power-efficient supercomputing with the SANAM supercomputer, securing the number two ranking on the latest Green500 List. The supercomputer will aid FIAS in quantum chromodynamics research.

Powered by 420 AMD FirePro S10000 dual-GPU server graphics cards based on AMD Graphics Core Next Architecture, the SANAM supercomputer redefines supercomputing with its incredible power efficiency.

Capable of sustaining 420 TFLOPS, providing a system energy efficiency of over 2.3 GFLOPS per watt and performing 2,351 million calculations per second per watt, the SANAM supercomputer is shifting the industry mindset of determining performance through FLOPS to focusing on eco-conscious measurements like performance-per-watt. This latest AMD technology milestone comes two days after the announcement that AMD Opteron processors power the world's highest-performance supercomputer, "Titan," as ranked on the Top500's Supercomputer Sites list. In addition to the number two ranking on the Green500 List, the SANAM supercomputer can also claim the performance crown as the most powerful and energy-efficient supercomputer powered primarily by graphics processors.

AMD also introduced new reliability features that allowed the SANAM supercomputer to perform 3.6 quintillion double-precision operations during its Green500 run, further demonstrating how leading-edge supercomputing can be achieved through green technology. Moreover, AMD is solidifying its commitment to the future of the high performance computing (HPC) industry by announcing four emerging software tools that enable developers to use familiar programming methods to leverage AMD discrete graphics processing unit (GPU) and accelerated processing unit (APU) technologies.

"There is a massive shift in the HPC industry from defining supercomputing performance in terms of FLOPS to performance-per-watt and developing environmentally responsible technologies," said John Gustafson, senior fellow and chief product architect, Graphics Business Unit, AMD. "The SANAM supercomputer, equipped with AMD FirePro S10000 GPUs based on our Graphics Core Next Architecture, consumes a mere 180 kilowatts of power while running, which is incredibly low for a supercomputer. With solutions like the FirePro S10000 along with innovative software from AMD and technology partners like AccelerEyes, CAPS Entreprise and PGI we enable institutions engaged in cutting-edge research, like the University's work in quantum chromodynamics, to achieve massive compute performance and processor density, while staying within their power budget."

SANAM is a joint project of Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies and King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. As an integral part of the high-speed cluster (HSC) project, Adtech Global provided technical research to identify a systems solution that would not only work for the high-speed cluster HSC application, but could also provide long-term development and modifications opportunities.

"We focused on utilizing technologies which would provide the ability to continuously improve performance, lower costs and reduce power consumption in the future," said Rick Rozalsky, vice president of Global Business Development at Adtech Global. "We knew at the outset that the SANAM supercomputer we worked on with University of Frankfurt and AMD was going to be special, but knowing is one thing and seeing is another. We have worked on many high-end, custom solutions; however, it is always exciting to flip the switch and witness the incredible performance of today's supercomputers. The performance-per-watt capability of this system is simply amazing."

AMD continues to leverage the massive parallel processing capabilities of its GPUs to power the next breakthrough in scientific research. By enabling HPC developers to take advantage of GPU compute with familiar developer tools and programming methodologies that integrate OpenCL on the backend, AMD is working to grow and strengthen the software ecosystem for a broader base of developers to take advantage of GPU computing.

Four Maturing Tools for HPC Developers

● Accelereyes ArrayFire: Accelereyes is dedicated to delivering fast, simple GPU software. The general availability release of ArrayFire, a GPU software acceleration library that provides hundreds of functions already optimized for speed by top GPU computing experts, allows for easy integration into C, C++, Fortran and Python applications;

● Portland Group (PGI) Accelerator compilers: PGI Accelerator Fortran, C and C++ compilers target the AMD line of APUs as well as the AMD line of discrete GPU accelerators. PGI continues to work closely with AMD to extend its PGI Accelerator directive-based compilers. The goal is to generate code directly for AMD GPU accelerators, and to generate heterogeneous x64+GPU executable files that automatically use both the CPU and GPU compute capabilities of AMD APUs;

● CAPS Entreprise HMPP compiler: CAPS Entreprise is a leading provider of solutions for deploying applications on "many-core" systems. CAPS source-to-source HMPP compiler is based on C, C++, and Fortran directives and supports OpenACC and OpenHMPP standards. With help from AMD, the compiler incorporates a powerful OpenCL parallel data generator;

● AMD CodeXL: AMD CodeXL is a comprehensive tool suite that enables developers to harness the benefits of AMD CPUs, GPUs and APUs. It includes powerful GPU debugging, comprehensive GPU and CPU profiling, and static OpenCL kernel analysis capabilities, enhancing accessibility for software developers to enter the era of heterogeneous computing. AMD CodeXL is available as both a Visual Studio extension and as a standalone user interface application for Windows and Linux.
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22 Comments on AMD FirePro Server Graphics Redefining Supercomputing Performance

#1
TheMailMan78
Big Member
That thing needs more fans IMO.
Posted on Reply
#2
Nordic
Cristian_25H420 TFLOPS
Nice
Posted on Reply
#3
phanbuey
ahh... the shot back from AMD after TITAN (which used AMD procs but nvidia gfx) was announced...



Stay tune for next week, when nvidia will point out that AMD is selling supercomputers to Saudis and try to imply some loose connection to the Taliban. (jk)
Posted on Reply
#4
Auryx
Awesome news for AMD !
Posted on Reply
#5
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
phanbueyahh... the shot back from AMD after TITAN (which used AMD procs but nvidia gfx) was announced...

img.techpowerup.org/121114/Green500.jpg

Stay tune for next week, when nvidia will point out that AMD is selling supercomputers to Saudis and try to imply some loose connection to the Taliban. (jk)
lmfao
Posted on Reply
#6
Nordic
phanbueyahh... the shot back from AMD after TITAN (which used AMD procs but nvidia gfx) was announced...

img.techpowerup.org/121114/Green500.jpg

Stay tune for next week, when nvidia will point out that AMD is selling supercomputers to Saudis and try to imply some loose connection to the Taliban. (jk)
Amd - Armed Militia Dealers
Posted on Reply
#7
HumanSmoke
james888Amd - Armed Militia Dealers
more like Anywhere Money Disappears
Posted on Reply
#8
hardcore_gamer
phanbueyStay tune for next week, when nvidia will point out that AMD is selling supercomputers to Saudis and try to imply some loose connection to the Taliban. (jk)
I wonder if it's possible to calculate the optimum point of impact for slamming planes into buildings using super computers. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#9
HTC
hardcore_gamerI wonder if it's possible to calculate the optimum point of impact for slamming planes into buildings using super computers. :laugh:
Given what happened in 2001, that's not even remotely funny, dude!!! :shadedshu
Posted on Reply
#10
lastcalaveras
HTCGiven what happened in 2001, that's not even remotely funny, dude!!!
what too soon?
Posted on Reply
#11
de.das.dude
Pro Indian Modder
DAYUM! Go Go GO AMD!

now we know were AMD has been spending their resources!
Posted on Reply
#12
Recus
And it's strange seeing that FirePro is combined with Intel CPUs and nVidia with Opterons.
This.
Posted on Reply
#13
hardcore_gamer
de.das.dudeow we know were AMD has been spending their resources!
Where ?
Posted on Reply
#14
librin.so.1
And it's strange seeing that FirePro is combined with Intel CPUs and nVidia with Opterons.
Remembering this article, the article gives me an idea...

...could it be that they all are in a sweet love-hate relationship? :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#15
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
hardcore_gamerI wonder if it's possible to calculate the optimum point of impact for slamming planes into buildings using super computers. :laugh:
dont be a jack ass
Posted on Reply
#16
Morgoth
Fueled by Sapphire
hardcore_gamerI wonder if it's possible to calculate the optimum point of impact for slamming planes into buildings using super computers. :laugh:
yes it can, they use this kind of stuff to calculate bullet projetile path for battleships, artilary, rockets ect
Posted on Reply
#17
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
Morgothyes it can, they use this kind of stuff to calculate bullet projetile path for battleships, artilary, rockets ect
mission critical systems these normally would go into
Posted on Reply
#18
de.das.dude
Pro Indian Modder
i think projectile calculating stuff is done by military computers?
Posted on Reply
#19
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
de.das.dudei think projectile calculating stuff is done by military computers?
you have no idea:laugh:
Posted on Reply
#21
TRWOV
EDIT: Sorry, mistaken
Posted on Reply
#22
HumanSmoke
Cortexwww.top500.org/system/177996


Why so low efficiency?

rpeak 1098TFLOPS
rmax 421TFLOPS
Asymmetric CPU to GPU ratio - low number of CPU's vs GPU's in the system. The same metric that allows for a high FLOP/watt -namely a high GPU count (x86 CPU's being relatively inefficient in FP64 per watt). Compare Titan (CPU+GPU) to the previous Jaguar iteration (CPU), or any IBM BlueGene system.

You are not alone...It seems to have not gone unnoticed elsewhere
Posted on Reply
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