Emcore, Mellanox supply Infiniband for DOE's petaflop supercomputer - Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Emcore, Mellanox supply Infiniband for DOE's petaflop supercomputer


Jun 19, 2008

June 19, 2008 -- Emcore and Mellanox Technologies have joined to provide Infiniband interconnect technology for use in the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Roadrunner supercomputer, the first High Performance Computing (HPC) cluster to break the Petaflop computing barrier.

For use in Roadrunner, Emcore supplied its Emcore Connects Cables (ECC), billed as InfiniBand interconnects that operate at 20-Gbit/sec data rates with an extremely low bit error rate of 10(-15). This combination of high performance and excellent reliability led IBM to choose the cables for the supercomputer, says Emcore.

IBM used 55 miles of the ECC optical fiber to build the Roadrunner HPC system. On June 9, the DOE announced that Roadrunner was the first system to break 1,000 trillion calculations per second mark known as the Petaflop.

For its part in providing the supercomputer's underlying fabric technology, Mellanox supplied its ConnectX 20-Gbit/sec InfiniBand adapters and switch systems, which are based on the company's InfiniScale switch silicon.

Built by IBM and housed at the National Nuclear Security Administration's (NNSA) Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, Roadrunner, the world's fastest supercomputer, will be used to analyze national security threats, test nuclear stockpiles, run annual testing of various nuclear weapons systems, and investigate long-term climate change, astronomy and human genome science.

Also in conjunction with Mellanox, Emcore is demonstrating a 40 Gbit/sec ECC cable at this month's International Supercomputing Conference in Dresden, Germany.


We Recommend

Skeletons in the telecom closet: The 10 scariest things I've seen this year

The 11 biggest cabling stories of 2011

Free app calculates loss budget

Reference poster dissects 802.11n

Fiber installation courses available online

Counterfeit cable exposed

Making the switch from 62.5- to 50-micron fiber

Telecom grounding and bonding standard published by NECA and BICSI

Free poster highlights 10 fiber-safety rules


Most Popular Articles
Top Blog Posts

TIA sets objectives for 40G over twisted pair

Cancer patients miss surgery due to cable theft

Cable tech finds 500-pound bear in customer’s basement

Nearly-electrocuted copper-cable thief speaks remorsefully

House explosions, captured on video, blamed on cable theft

Modified U.S. Army drone spies on WiFi users

Turn a wiring cabinet into a liquor cabinet


Receive Free E-mail Newsletters from Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Want to hear about more articles like this one? Sign up for our free email newsletters.



Email:

First Name:

Last Name:

Promo Code (optional):

Country:

Available Newsletters:
Cabling News

Data Centers Report

Contractor Report

 


Cabling Installation & Maintenance Topic and Resource Categories:

Data CentersCabling Standards
Network CableConnectivity Technologies
Network ProtocolsIP Convergence
WirelessDesign, Installation & Testing
Current IssueArchives
Cabling BlogBuyer's Guide