Shaheen (supercomputer)
Shaheen consists primarily of a 16-rack IBM Blue Gene/P supercomputer owned and operated by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST). Built in partnership with IBM, Shaheen is intended to enable KAUST Faculty and Partners to research both large- and small-scale projects, from inception to realization.
Shaheen, named after the Peregrine Falcon, was the largest and most powerful supercomputer in the Middle East[1] and is intended to grow into a petascale facility by the year 2011,[2] Originally built at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York, Shaheen was moved to KAUST in mid-2009.[2]
The father of Shaheen is Majid Alghaslan, KAUST's founding interim chief information officer and the University's leader in the acquisition, design, and development of the Shaheen supercomputer. Majid was part of the executive founding team for the University and the person who also named the machine
Systems
Shaheen includes the following functional elements:
- 16 racks of Blue Gene/P, having a peak performance of 222 Teraflops
- 164 IBM IBM System x 3550 Xeon nodes, having a peak performance of 12 Teraflops
Performance
Shaheen's performance and computing capabilities include:[3]
- 65,536 independent processing cores.
- A next generation data center that is able to scale to exascale computing requirements
- 10 Gbit/s access to world's academic and research networks.
The file system and tape drive will be mounted across both the Blue Gene system and the Linux cluster. All elements of the system will be connected together on a common network backbone that is accessible from all campus buildings. The systems will also be accessible from the Internet.
Services
The Shaheen system at KAUST Supercomputing Laboratory (KSL) is available to help KAUST users and projects, to provide training and advice, to develop and deploy applications, to provide consultation on best practices and to provide collaboration support as needed.
KAUST Faculty will have access to:
- General support for Shaheen facility use, including usage scheduling of Shaheen and peripheral systems
- High-performance computing support for "Grand Challenges" by collaboration with the Center to deliver fundamental breakthroughs in specific areas of research
- Collaboration to provide high-performance computing applications, middleware, library, algorithm support and enablement services
- Applications Enablement where users can task the CDCR to develop, enable, port and scale key applications
- High-performance Computing Program Best Practice Management techniques
- Participation with KAUST researchers in external projects
- Training on high-performance computing systems management, programming, applications tuning and algorithms
Future Plans
On Monday 17th November 2014 KAUST announced the successor to the Blue Gene/P system that was installed in June 2009. Cray will provide KAUST with a Cray® XC40™ supercomputer with DataWarp™ technology, a Cray® Sonexion® 2000 storage system, a Cray Tiered Adaptive Storage (TAS) system and a Cray® Urika-GD™ graph analytics appliance. The Cray XC40 system at KAUST, with the project name "Shaheen II," will be 25 times more powerful than its current system. KAUST will significantly augment its world-class academic and research facilities and capabilities to advance scientific discoveries.
Research Supported
KAUST, using the Shaheen systems, will focus on four specific research thrusts:[1]
- Resources, energy, and environment
- Biosciences and bioengineering
- Materials science and engineering
- Applied mathematics and computational science
Data sets for this research will be unique in that they will come from the Saudi Arabia region, focusing on areas such as oil and gas reserves, Red Sea data, and other areas distinctive to KAUST.[1]
Restrictions
Although KAUST doesn't support any kind of discrimination against any students or faculty based on Religion, Sex, or National Origin, IBM had to comply with US Export regulations governing exporting high-end computing technology. As per the regulations [4] a restriction had to be made to deny nationals of Syria, Iran, Sudan, Cuba, and North Korea from access to the supercomputer.
Institutional Partners
The Shaheen system at KAUST is made possible through a joint collaboration between the IBM Corporation and KAUST. In addition to IBM, KSL will be partnering with the following partner research institutions and organizations:
- The Oxford Center for Collaborative Applied Mathematics (OCCAM) at Oxford University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- Imperial College, London
- Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
- Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
- Français du Pétrole
- National University of Singapore
- American University in Cairo
- Technische Universität München
- GE Global Research
- King Abdulaziz City for Science & Technology
- King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals
- Saudi Aramco
- Wipro Arabia
- Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Michael Feldman, HPC Wire, "Saudi Arabia Buys Some Big Iron," October 1, 2008". Retrieved 2009-03-13.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Patrick Thibodaux, Computer World, "Saudi Arabia unveils grand supercomputer ambitions," September 22, 2008". Retrieved 2009-03-13.
- ↑ Shaheen's performance, from IBM's official website
- ↑ KAUST Conditions of Usage from KAUST's official website