Introduction

Earlier this month I drove out to Oak Ridge, Tennessee to pay a visit to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). I'd never been to a national lab before, but my ORNL visit was for a very specific purpose: to witness the final installation of the Titan supercomputer.

ORNL is a US Department of Energy laboratory that's managed by UT-Battelle. Oak Ridge has a core competency in computational science, making it not only unique among all DoE labs but also making it perfect for a big supercomputer.

Titan is the latest supercomputer to be deployed at Oak Ridge, although it's technically a significant upgrade rather than a brand new installation. Jaguar, the supercomputer being upgraded, featured 18,688 compute nodes - each with a 12-core AMD Opteron CPU. Titan takes the Jaguar base, maintaining the same number of compute nodes, but moves to 16-core Opteron CPUs paired with an NVIDIA Kepler K20X GPU per node. The result is 18,688 CPUs and 18,688 GPUs, all networked together to make a supercomputer that should be capable of landing at or near the top of the TOP500 list.

We won't know Titan's final position on the list until the SC12 conference in the middle of November (position is determined by the system's performance in Linpack), but the recipe for performance is all there. At this point, its position on the TOP500 is dependent on software tuning and how reliable the newly deployed system has been.


Rows upon rows of cabinets make up the Titan supercomputer

Over the course of a day in Oak Ridge I got a look at everything from how Titan was built to the types of applications that are run on the supercomputer. Having seen a lot of impressive technology demonstrations over the years, I have to say that my experience at Oak Ridge with Titan is probably one of the best. Normally I cover compute as it applies to making things look cooler or faster on consumer devices. I may even dabble in talking about how better computers enable more efficient datacenters (though that's more Johan's beat). But it's very rare that I get to look at the application of computing to better understanding life, the world and universe around us. It's meaningful, impactful compute.

The Hardware

In the 15+ years I've been writing about technology, I've never actually covered a supercomputer. I'd never actually seen one until my ORNL visit. I have to say, the first time you see a supercomputer it's a bit anticlimactic. If you've ever toured a modern datacenter, it doesn't look all that different.


A portion of Titan


More Titan, the metal pipes carry coolant

Titan in particular is built from 200 custom 19-inch cabinets. These cabinets may look like standard 19-inch x 42RU datacenter racks, but what's inside is quite custom. All of the cabinets that make up Titan requires a room that's about the size of a basketball court.

The hardware comes from Cray. The Titan installation uses Cray's new XK7 cabinets, but it's up to the customer to connect together however many they want.

ORNL is actually no different than any other compute consumer: its supercomputers are upgraded on a regular basis to keep them from being obsolete. The pressures are even greater for supercomputers to stay up to date, after a period of time it actually costs more to run an older supercomputer than it would to upgrade the machine. Like modern datacenters, supercomputers are entirely power limited. Titan in particular will consume around 9 megawatts of power when fully loaded.

The upgrade cycle for a modern supercomputer is around 4 years. Titan's predecessor, Jaguar, was first installed back in 2005 but regularly upgraded over the years. Whenever these supercomputers are upgraded, old hardware is traded back in to Cray and a credit is issued. Although Titan reuses much of the same cabinetry and interconnects as Jaguar, the name change felt appropriate given the significant departure in architecture. The Titan supercomputer makes use of both CPUs and GPUs for compute. Whereas the latest version of Jaguar featured 18,688 12-core AMD Opteron processors, Titan keeps the total number of compute nodes the same (18,688) but moves to 16-core AMD Opteron 6274 CPUs. What makes the Titan move so significant however is that each 16-core Opteron is paired with an NVIDIA K20X (Kepler GK110) GPU.


A Titan compute board: 4 AMD Opteron (16-core CPUs) + 4 NVIDIA Tesla K20X GPUs

The transistor count alone is staggering. Each 16-core Opteron is made up of two 8-core die on a single chip, totaling 2.4B transistors built using GlobalFoundries' 32nm process. Just in CPU transistors alone, that works out to be 44.85 trillion transistors for Titan. Now let's talk GPUs.

NVIDIA's K20X is the server/HPC version of GK110, a part that never had a need to go to battle in the consumer space. The K20X features 2688 CUDA cores, totaling 7.1 billion transistors per GPU built using TSMC's 28nm process. With a 1:1 ratio of CPUs and GPUs, Titan adds another 132.68 trillion transistors to the bucket bringing the total transistor count up to over 177 trillion transistors - for a single supercomputer.

I often use Moore's Law to give me a rough idea of when desktop compute performance will make its way into notebooks and then tablets and smartphones. With Titan, I can't even begin to connect the dots. There's just a ton of computing horsepower available in this installation.

Transistor counts are impressive enough, but when you do the math on the number of cores it's even more insane. Titan has a total of 299,008 AMD Opteron cores. ORNL doesn't break down the number of GPU cores but if I did the math correctly we're talking about over 50 million FP32 CUDA cores. The total computational power of Titan is expected to be north of 20 petaflops.

Each compute node (CPU + GPU) features 32GB of DDR3 memory for the CPU and a dedicated 6GB of GDDR5 (ECC enabled) for the K20X GPU. Do the math and that works out to be 710TB of memory.


Titan's storage array

System storage is equally impressive: there's a total of 10 petabytes of storage in Titan. The underlying storage hardware isn't all that interesting - ORNL uses 10,000 standard 1TB 7200 RPM 2.5" hard drives. The IO subsystem is capable of pushing around 240GB/s of data. ORNL is considering including some elements of solid state storage in future upgrades to Titan, but for its present needs there is no more cost effective solution for IO than a bunch of hard drives. The next round of upgrades will take Titan to around 20 - 30PB of storage, at peak transfer speeds of 1TB/s.

Most workloads on Titan will be run remotely, so network connectivity is just as important as compute. There are dozens of 10GbE links inbound to the machine. Titan is also linked to the DoE's Energy Sciences Network (ESNET) 100Gbps backbone.

Physical Architecture, OS, Power & Cooling
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  • Strunf - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    He's probably not telling the whole thing, there's no way you could reduce the wire thickness by 20 or more by just increasing the voltage to 480V.
  • A5 - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    Uh, yes you can. Higher voltage = less current for the same power, which means you can use a thinner cable.
  • Kevin G - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    There is likely a reduction in size of the insulating layer due to lower amperage as well.
  • relztes - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    Voltage is 2.3 times higher, so current is 2.3 times lower for the same power. A wire 2.3x thinner (5.3x less cross sectional area) will give the same power loss. Insulation thickness would be slightly higher because it's based on voltage not current.
  • HighTech4US - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    If you double the Voltage you halve the Current for the same amount of Power.

    Power Loss (in the cables) is calculated as I squared times R. Since I is 1/2 at 480 Volts the Power Loss is 1/4 (1/2 squared) as much.
  • HighTech4US - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    > The comment about the thickness requirement of the cables for 480V compared to 208V in the first power delivery video is staggering. I'm surprised there's such a difference.

    V = Voltage
    I = Current
    R = Resistance
    P = Power

    P = V times I

    So if you double the Voltage you halve the Current for the same amount of Power.

    Power Loss (in the cables) is calculated as I squared times R. Since I is 1/2 at 480 Volts the Power Loss is 1/4 (1/2 squared) as much.

    So they determined a fixed power loss in the cables and reduced the size (which increased the resistance) of the cables so that the thinner cables (at 480 volts) had the same loss as the thicker cables (at 208 volts).
  • Jaybus - Tuesday, February 19, 2013 - link

    A 480 Vrms circuit draws less than half the current of a 208 Vrms circuit at the same power level. So the resistance of the wire can be more than double. Resistance of the wire is the resistivity of the copper material times the length divided by the cross-sectional area. .This means the radius is less than half, or the diameter of the wire for 480 V can be less than a quarter of the diameter of the wire for 208 V.
  • ishbuggy - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    This is an awesome article Anand! I would love to see more super-computing like this, and maybe some in-depth discussion of how super-computing works and differs from traditional computing architectures. Thanks for the great article though!
  • truman5 - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 - link

    +1

    I just registered as a user just to say how awesome this article is!
  • itnAAnti - Friday, November 9, 2012 - link

    +1

    I also just registered just to say that this is a great article! One of the best I have seen on Anandtech, keep up the awesome work. Perhaps you can look into the Parallella Adapteva project next!

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