Welcome to www.ClusterGate.RU

Internet
ClusterGate.RU

Home: Why clusters and for what the clusters are
News: mainly about the site
Linux: General Information,
Distributions, etc.
Clustering: software systems to organize clusters
Virtualization:
Hardware: server hardware and hardware for clustering
General Purpose Software
File Systems:
local and distributed
Access Methods
to large volume of data
Data transfer
between clusters
Security: all aspects (antihacker software, spare backup copy, power control)
High Performance Computing:
Examples of powerful clusters
Examples: midrange clusters
Monitoring and Measurement tools
Batch/Load Balance systems
Grid ...
Further reading:
Journals, Reviews,
News, Books
Computing in High Energy Physics:
Computing sites,
application packages
This is HPC page for ClusterGate.RU

  • Green500 Welcome to the Green500 list! The purpose of this list is to provide a ranking of the most energy-efficient supercomputers in the world and serve as a complementary view to the TOP500.
  • TOP500 List of clusters -- probably most powerful clusters in the World but not all of them
  • TOP50 -- the list of probably most powerful Russian clusters however not all of them
  • SKIF-Politech -- SuperComputer cluster at Tomsk Politech University
  • Computing @ llnl.gov Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is home to BlueGene/L and Purple, ranked Nos. 1 and 3 on the TOP500 list of world's fastest computers. [Fri Jan 13 16:06:01 MSK 2006]
  • Introduction to Livermore Computing Resources This tutorial provides an overview of Livermore Computing's (LC) supercomputing resources and how to effectively use them. It is definitely intended as a "getting started" document for new users or for those who want to know "in a nutshell" what supercomputing at LC is all about from a practical user's perspective. It is also intended as the first presentation in a 4+ day, hands-on workshop that covers in great detail parallel programming on LC's supercomputing systems.
  • SCS -- Scientific Cluster Support at Berkeley Lab. The Scientific Cluster Support service is a Laboratory program designed to increase the contribution of scientific computing in Berkeley Lab research projects by facilitating the production use of high performance Linux clusters.
  • Padeborn Center for Parallel Computing HPC at Germany
  • LCN HPC -- High Performance Computing Systems at London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN). The LCN has two significant pieces of computational infrastructure:
    • A computational grid for the simulation of nanostructures and nanoscale phenomena;
    • A visualization grid for the visualization of simulation results and data from experiments.
    Both were established as part of a major collaboration between the LCN, the Bio-Nanotechnology Centre (supported by the DTI MNT programme and the London Development Agency) and Sun Microsystems.
  • The AIST Super Cluster consists of more than 3000 processors and is the largest-scale cluster system in Japan. It is being introduced as part of the establishment of the Industrial, Academic and Governmental Cooperative Information Technology Research Facilities for creating new industries and venture businesses. It started operation in March 2004.
  • NAS -- NASA Advanced Supercomputing division
  • CCNI -- the Computational Center for Nanotechnology Innovations, based on the Rensselaer campus and at its Rensselaer Technology Park in Troy, N.Y., is designed both to help continue the impressive advances in shrinking device dimensions seen by electronics manufacturers, and to extend this model to a wide array of industries that could benefit from nanotechnology.
  • The National Center for Computational Sciences (NCCS) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory The National Center for Computational Sciences (NCCS) was founded in 1992 to advance the state of the art in high-performance computing (HPC) by bringing a new generation of parallel computers out of the laboratory and into the hands of the scientists who could most use them. It is a managed activity of the Advanced Scientific Computing Research program of the DOE Office of Science (DOE-SC) and is located at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
  • Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center - general purpose computing center. The mission is to:
    1. Enable solutions to important problems in Science and Engineering by providing leading-edge computational resources to the national community;
    2. Advance computational science, computational techniques and the National Information Infrastructure;
    3. Educate researchers in high performance techniques and their utility; and
    4. Assist the private sector in exploiting high performance computing for their competitive advantage.
  • Texas Advanced Computing Center TACC engages in the following activities:
    • evaluates, acquires, and deploys advanced computing resources, including
    • both computing systems and software;
    • offers training workshops, seminars, and lectures in academic classes to
    • educate and prepare new users of these resources;
    • provides expert consulting and technical documentation to assist
    • researchers in using these resources effectively;
    • conducts research and development activities to produce new
    • computational techniques and technologies that enhance the capabilities
    • of advanced computing resources; and
    • collaborates with computational researchers to apply advanced
    • computational techniques in their research activities.
    [Wed Jan 11 19:12:57 MSK 2006]
  • High Performance and Grid Computing at NCSU NC State University High-Performance Computing (HPC) is part of the initiative to provide state of the art support for research and academic computing at NC State. HPC group provides NC State students and faculty with entry and medium level high-performance research and education computing facilities, consulting support and scientific workflow support. This service includes the NC State Grid operations, Virtual Computing Laboratory (VCL) and Visualization and Analytics operations. [Wed Jan 11 19:08:26 MSK 2006]
  • San Diego Supercomputer Center at UCSD SDSC was founded with a $170 million grant from the National Science Foundation.s (NSF) Supercomputer Centers program. From 1997 to 2004, SDSC extended its leadership in computational science and engineering to form the National Partnership for Advanced Computational Infrastructure (NPACI), teaming with approximately 40 university partners around the country. Today, SDSC is an organized research unit of the University of California, San Diego primarily funded by NSF with a staff of talented scientists, software developers and support personnel.
    Over the years, SDSC has served more than 10,000 researchers at 300 academic, government and industrial institutions in the United States and around the world. Today, these scientists and engineers increasingly rely on the availability of globally accessible data cyberinfrastructure tools to drive research and education. This focus on data cyberinfrastructure provides a broad and useful spectrum of integrated technologies to support increasingly complex, large-scale and cooperative scientific endeavors.[Wed Jan 11 18:58:08 MSK 2006]
  • TeraGrid -- is an open scientific discovery infrastructure combining leadership class resources at eight partner sites to create an integrated, persistent computational resource. Deployment of TeraGrid was completed in September 2004, bringing over 40 teraflops of computing power and nearly 2 petabytes of rotating storage, and specialized data analysis and visualization resources into production, interconnected at 10-30 gigabits/second via a dedicated national network.
    TeraGrid is coordinated through the Grid Infrastructure Group (GIG) at the University of Chicago, working in partnership with the Resource Provider sites that participated in the TeraGrid construction project from 2001 through 2004.
  • Ohio Supercomputer Center OSC provides a reliable high performance computing and high performance communications infrastructure for a diverse statewide/regional community including education, academic research, industry, and state government.
    OSC promotes and stimulates computational research and education in order to act as a key enabler for the state's aspirations in advanced technology, information systems, and advanced industries; and
    OSC acts as a catalytic partner of Ohio universities and industries to enable Ohio to compete for international, federal, and state funding, focusing on new research and business opportunities.
  • Joined Supercomputer Center of Russian Academy of Science
  • Siberian (Russia) Super Computer Center at the Instirute of computing mathematics and GeoPhysics (all in Russian)
  • Long list of HPC sites at Office of Information Technology at University of Santa Barbara
  • HPC @ Dell
  • HPC @ HP
  • HPC @ IBM
  • HPC @ SGI
  • HPC @ SUN
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Last revised: Monday, 27-Apr-2009 12:41:47 MSD
Current date/time: Saturday, 04-May-2024 12:51:03 MSK
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