France's GENCI Deploys SGI Supercomputers

SGI Altix ICE and InfiniteStorage Reduce Time-to-Insight in Climatology, Astrophysics, New Energies, and Life and Materials Sciences

SGI today announced that the French national high performance computing (HPC) organization Grand Equipement National de Calcul Intensif (GENCI) is expanding France's compute and storage capabilities with SGI supercomputing solutions. The organization’s new SGI Altix ICE installation called JADE is located at France’s National Computer Center for Higher Education (CINES). It is being used by researchers in diverse scientific disciplines, including climatology and sustainable development, space and aeronautical research, energy exploration, industrial research, and life and materials sciences.

The SGI Altix ICE supercomputer connects to “RENATER”, the French high-speed network, and to European community infrastructures to provide quick and expanded access to data that scientists and engineers need to accelerate results throughout French and European research ecosystems. With 2,688 quad-core Intel Xeon processors, for a total of 10,752 cores, and 48TB of system memory, Altix ICE delivers up to 120 TFLOPS and features almost 50TB of distributed memory.

The new SGI InfiniteStorage 4600 RAID system supports the I/O-intensive applications required by advanced science and engineering applications. The system delivers 175,000 sustained Input/Output Operations per Second (IOPS) and provides additional storage, up to 250TB. Data is shared at 21GB/s via a Lustre distributed file system. The storage system is attached to an existing file server using SGI InfiniteStorage Data Migration Facility software, which maximizes storage performance and capacity utilization across multiple tiers of RAID and tape storage. As GENCI’s storage needs evolve, SGI InfiniteStorage 4600 allows it to scale and assures critical data is always available to researchers.

“This SGI Altix ICE deployment is essential technology that underpins our strategy to implement the computing infrastructures needed to assist the development of scientific research throughout Europe,” said Catherine Rivière, president of GENCI. “It is testimony to the importance of HPC for accelerating innovation and strengthening global competitiveness.”

When combined with existing SGI equipment, the Altix ICE installation at CINES now provides 267 TFLOPS and 750TB of attached storage. The supercomputer yields an overall efficiency of 89 percent as demonstrated on the High Performance Linpack (HPL) benchmark (237 TFLOPS sustained).

“SGI is proud to supply GENCI with its new Altix ICE supercomputer for systems that allow France to maintain its research leadership in a multitude of disciplines,” said Joop Ruijgrok, vice president of SGI EMEA. “When using the systems to run many iterations of a simulation or to analyze huge amounts of data, scientists rely on SGI Altix ICE and InfiniteStorage to deliver reduced time to insight. This supercomputer deployment illustrates how SGI delivers powerful solutions to meet the exacting needs of the most demanding HPC customers in the world.”