Cray and AMD will build an exascale supercomputer for the Oak Ridge National Laboratory:
AMD today announced that it will partner with Cray to build Frontier, a supercomputer capable of "exascale" performance — one that can complete at least a quintillion floating point computations ("flops") per second, where a flop equals two 15-digit numbers multiplied together — for weather system simulation, subatomic particle modeling, and more. The two companies expect it will be the world's fastest supercomputer when it's delivered in 2021, with more than 1.5 exaflops of theoretical performance — roughly 50 times the speed of today's top supercomputers and faster than the top 160 combined. Frontier will be built at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
[...] Driving Frontier's breakthrough compute is what AMD claims is the first "fully optimized" GPU and CPU design for supercomputing. It features a custom AMD Epyc processor packing a future Zen core architecture designed for high-performance computing (HPC) and AI workloads, along with a graphics processing unit (GPU) in AMD's Radeon Instinct product lineup of server accelerators. The GPUs feature HPC engines, "extensive" mixed precision operations, and high-bandwidth memory, and they're linked together — one Epyc processor to four Instinct graphics cards — by AMD's Infinity Fabric and Cray Slingshot high-bandwidth system interconnect architectures.
Also at AnandTech and The Verge.
See also: AMD's Supercomputer Deal Is a 'Landmark Win' for Chip Maker, Analyst Says
(Score: 2) by richtopia on Tuesday May 07 2019, @08:36PM (1 child)
Earlier on SN we saw the Aurora Supercomputer which will use Intel discrete GPUs: https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=15/04/10/0216205 [soylentnews.org]
It will be interesting to see a comparison between two systems so closely integrated with a single hardware vendor. Cray is manufacturing both systems.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Tuesday May 07 2019, @08:49PM
That obviously didn't happen. In 2017 they changed the Aurora plans to target exaflops [soylentnews.org].
Xeon Phi is a discontinued product line and Intel will be making actual discrete GPUs starting next year. It's not clear which chips Aurora will use beyond Intel Xeon Scalable and Optane memory. Maybe the Xe-branded discrete GPUs will make an appearance.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]