Sun Constellation System

Sun Constellation System is an open petascale computing environment introduced by Sun Microsystems in 2007.

Main hardware components

Software stack

Services

Production systems

Ranger at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) was the largest production Constellation system. Ranger had 62,976 processor cores in 3,936 nodes and a peak performance of 580 TFlops.[1][2] Ranger was the 7th most powerful TOP500 supercomputer in the world at the time of its introduction.[3] After 5 years of service at TACC, it was dismantled and shipped to South Africa, Tanzania, and Botswana to help foster HPC development in Africa.[4]

A number of smaller Constellation systems are deployed at other supercomputer centers, including the University of Oslo.[5]

gollark: Do you WANT this to happen?
gollark: You are a TOTAL apiohazard.
gollark: SERIOUSLY, umnikos? SERIOUSLY?
gollark: Yes, indeed why.
gollark: Also, GNU/Nobody may give you bananos?

References

  1. "TACC > HPC Systems". The University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original on 2009-08-01. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
  2. "More Ranger Facts and Figures". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved 2016-06-18.
  3. "TOP500 List - November 2008". TOP500.Org. 2010-08-11.
  4. Salazar, Jorge (2014-07-14). "Ranger Supercomputer Begins New Life". The University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  5. "HPC Consortium: University of Oslo". Sun Microsystems. 2008-06-17. Retrieved 2016-06-18.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.