Publication | Closed Access
GrayWulf: Scalable Clustered Architecture for Data Intensive Computing
47
Citations
16
References
2009
Year
Unknown Venue
Cluster ComputingData Intensive ComputingEngineeringHpc SystemsComputer ArchitectureParallel StorageHigh Performance ComputingSupercomputer ArchitectureData ScienceData-intensive PlatformParallel ComputingData ManagementScalable Clustered ArchitectureComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceData Intensive ComputationsData-intensive ComputingScalable ComputingCloud ComputingParallel ProgrammingBig Data
Data intensive computing presents a significant challenge for traditional supercomputing architectures that maximize FLOPS since CPU speed has surpassed IO capabilities of HPC systems and BeoWulf clusters. We present the architecture for a three tier commodity component cluster designed for a range of data intensive computations operating on petascale data sets named GrayWulf. The design goal is a balanced system in terms of IO performance and memory size, according to Amdahl's laws. The hardware currently installed at JHU exceeds one petabyte of storage and has 0.5 bytes/sec of I/O and 1 byte of memory for each CPU cycle. The GrayWulf provides almost an order of magnitude better balance than existing systems. The paper covers its architecture and reference applications. The software design is presented in a companion paper.
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