This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (May 2014) |
System G was a cluster supercomputer at Virginia Tech consisting of 324 Apple Mac Pro computers with a total of 2592 processing cores. It was finished in November 2008 and ranked 279 in that month's edition of TOP500, running at 16.78 teraflops and peaking at 22.94 teraflops. It ran at a "sustained (Linpack) performance of 22.8 TFlops".[1] It transmitted data between nodes over Gigabit Ethernet and 40 Gbit/s Infiniband.
Mac Pro Nodes
editEach of the 324 Mac Pro machines contained two quad-core 2.8 GHz Xeon processors and 8 gigabytes of RAM.
Namesake
editSystem G's name stemmed from its homage to System X and to its focus on green computing—the cluster has thousands of power and thermal sensors to test high performance computing at low power requirements and was, at the time, the largest power-aware research system in the world.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b "CHECS Computing Resources". Virginia Tech. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
External links
edit- Computer Science at Virginia Tech: System G
- Virginia Tech: Center for High-End Computing Systems (‘CHECS’)
- Ars Technica: Virginia Tech building super computer out of 324 Mac Pros
- TOP500 website