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Dated December 17, 2002
www.idg.net - Online edition
The Indian government
run Center for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC)
has designed a parallel-processing 1-teraflop (trillion
floating point operations per second) supercomputer,
scalable up to 16-teraflops and available on a build-to-order
basis.
C-DAC was set up in
1988 with the objective of designing a supercomputer,
after India's bid to purchase a supercomputer from the
U.S. for weather forecasting, fell foul of U.S. restrictions
on exports of high performance computers to India.
The first supercomputer
from C-DAC, the PARAM (for PARAllel Machine)
8000 was introduced in 1991 with a rating of 1 Gigaflop
(billion floating point operations per second). Supercomputers
of ever-increasing processing power followed from C-DAC.
These supercomputers
are typically built around standard components, except
for a few components like the communications co-processor,
which was designed by C-DAC and fabricated abroad. While
a 100 Gigaflop PARAM is designed around UltraSPARC II processors from Santa
Clara, California-based Sun Microsystems Inc., the new 1-Teraflop supercomputer,
called the PARAM Padma, uses the Power4 processor from IBM Corp. in Armonk, New York, in a symmetric multiprocessor
configuration. "The decision to shift from UltraSPARC-II
to Power4 was on techno-economic grounds," said Shri.
Raj Kumar Arora, Executive Director of C-DAC, based
in Pune, India.
India is included in
the Tier 3 of the U.S. HPC Export Control Policy of
the U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC). Although the
U.S. government relaxed in March this year the upper
performance limit of computers that could be exported
to India, from 85,000 MTOPS (millions of theoretical
operations per second) to 190,000 MTOPS, imports of
supercomputers comparable to the new 1 Teraflop computer
designed by C-DAC are still restricted, according to
Arora. "The performance of the PARAM Padma in terms
of MTOPS is in the vicinity of 500,000 MTOPS,"
Arora added.
None of the PARAM supercomputers
installed in India so far are used in defense organizations,
according to Arora. "We have maintained throughout
that our research is for civilian applications, and
not for defense and nuclear applications," said
Arora. "Some defense organizations in India have
their own supercomputer projects. We see the PARAM project
as helping build our self-reliance, and also to help
establish India's hardware design capability."
The Indian government
is investing about $30 million over the next five years
in its supercomputer program and on setting up a grid
computing network. "The U.S. export controls were
at the top of our mind when we started the supercomputer
program in India," said Shri. Rajeeva Ratna Shah,
Secretary to the Indian government's Department of Information
Technology. "We have evolved since then, into designing
cost-effective and open systems supercomputers that
have a market both in India and abroad, for a variety
of applications both commercial and scientific."
Of the 52 PARAM supercomputers
installed so far, only seven have been installed outside
India. Two of them were installed in universities in
Canada and Germany, a third at a financial modeling
and simulation firm in Singapore, while the rest were
sold to Russia.
The low cost of the
PARAM Padma, which is priced at about $5 million, and
the applications C-DAC plans to offer on the platform,
will place it at an advantage in the international market,
according to Arora. "We will develop applications
depending on customer interest," Arora added. Currently,
applications in Bioinformatics, Computational
Structural Mechanics, Computational
Atmospheric Science, Seismic
Data Processing, Computational Chemistry, Evolutionary
Computing, and Computational
Fluid Dynamics are available on the supercomputer.
The PARAM Padma runs
on both the Linux operating system and AIX (IBM's version
of Unix). The AIX version supports 62 nodes with four
processors each, while the Linux version supports only
eight nodes, as Linux is not able to scale over more
nodes, according to Arora.
The nodes on the PARAM
Padma are connected through a primary 2.5G-bps (gigabits-per-second)
full-duplex System Area Network (SAN) designed by C-DAC,
and a Gigabit Ethernet backup network. "We had
to design a switch from scratch for inter-node data
traffic, rather than use a Gigabit Ethernet switch,
because the performance of the system largely depends
on the performance of the switch," Arora said.
The storage system
provides a primary storage of 5 terabytes scalable to
22T bytes. The storage architecture uses Fibre Channel-Arbitrated
Loop (FC-AL) based technology for interconnecting storage
subsystems like parallel file servers, NAS (network
attached storage) servers, metadata servers, RAID (Redundant
Array of Independent Disks) storage arrays, and automated
tape libraries, with an I/O performance of up to 2 Gigabytes-per-second.
C-DAC is also planning
to set up a national computing grid that would have
as its participant's key academic and research laboratories
in India. The resources from the grid, which will have
10-teraflops of compute power and 1-Petabyte (1 million
gigabytes) storage, will also be leased out to the corporate
sector. C-DAC is co-developing grid computing technology
in collaboration with IBM. The partnership with IBM
also includes co-development of speech technologies
and bio-computing, according to Arora.

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