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Held at SC2002 conference, team wins for the third
year in a row at speeds five times greater than last year's challenge
Media contact: Jon Bashor, JBashor@lbl.gov,
510-486-5849
November 25, 2002
BALTIMORE, Md. An international team led by scientists at
the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
achieved their third consecutive victory in the High-Performance
Bandwidth Challenge at the SC2002 Conference on high-performance
networking and computing.
The team won top honors for the Highest Performing Application,
moving data at a peak speed of 16.8 gigabits, or16.8 billion bits
of data, per second, which was more than five times higher than
the team's record-setting win at the SC2001 conference.
The team used clusters of computers at seven sites in the United
States, the Netherlands, Poland and the Czech Republic. Entitled
"Wide Area Distributed Simulations using Cactus, Globus and
Visapult," the winning application modeled gravitational waves
generated during the collision of black holes.
"It was great to win it again for the third straight year
for a bandwidth challenge hat trick" said Berkeley Lab's John
Shalf, leader of the team. "This year we proved that Moore's
Law is too slow for networking."
Participating sites in the winning effort were the Parallel Distributed
Systems Facility at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing
(NERSC) Center at LBNL; and clusters at the SC2002 conference in
Baltimore, Argonne National Laboratory, the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications, the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center,
the University of Amsterdam, and the Masaryk University in the Czech
Republic. Support was provided by the Albert Einstein Institute
in Germany, the Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center in Poland,
DOE's Energy Sciences Network (ESnet), Sandia National Laboratories,
SysKonnect, Hewlett-Packard and Force10 Networks Inc.
"We're happy to have helped Berkeley win again, especially
since they were our first customer," said Rob Quiros, marketing
director for Force10 Networks, makers of the E-Series high performance
10 gigabit Ethernet switch used by the team. "This successful
collaboration again proves that Force10 continues to define high-performance
networking for demanding application by delivering true 10 Gig E
performance."
Shalf said the team used a "Global Grid Testbed Collaboration"
to win. This same collaboration won two out of three awards in the
SC2002 High Performance Computing Challenge.
"As we build a more global infrastructure, researchers will
be able to choose from resources around the world to increase their
throughput," Shalf said.
The team ran the Visapult volume rendering application (http://www-vis.lbl.gov/RDProjects/visapult2/)
at SC2002 to create visualizations from the simulations being run
on the participating clusters. The OC-192 and OC-48 lines that fed
the Baltimore convention center were aggregated into three 10 gigabit
Ethernet links to a Force10 Networks switch that fed the HP/Compaq
Linux cluster in the LBNL booth on the showfloor. The team used
a cluster of Alpha-based computers loaned by Hewlett-Packard and
SysKonnect network interface cards to put together the winning effort.
According to Wes Bethel, the head of LBNL's Visualization Group
and developer of Visapult, the effort demonstrated how distributed
resources can be used effectively.
Bethel said that improvements in Visapult, along with the evolving
networking and Grid infrastructure of hardware, software and middleware
helped push the team's data transfer to such a high rate. Members
of the team tested the basic setup last July to demonstrate the
feasibility of 10 gigabit Ethernet capability. Details on that demo
can be found at http://www.lbl.gov/CS/Archive/10gig.html.
The LBNL-led team won the first ever Bandwidth Challenge at SC2000,
moving data at an average of 596 megabits per second over 60 minutes
and hitting a peak of 1.48 gigabits per second over a five-second
period. At the SC2001 conference, the team took the top prize by
achieving a sustained network performance level of 3.3 gigabits
per second.
First held in 2000, the High-Performance Bandwidth Challenge encourages
teams of researchers from around the world to use, if not swamp,
the conference network to demonstrate applications using huge amounts
of data. The challenge is sponsored by Qwest Communications and
provides cash prizes for the winning teams in three categories.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory
located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified scientific
research and is managed by the University of California. Learn more
at http://www.lbl.gov.
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