Max Planck Chooses Woven update from July 2008

World's fastest Ethernet compute cluster relies on Woven Systems 10-Gigabit Ethernet fabric

July 1, 2008

2 Min Read
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SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Woven Systems Inc., the leading innovator of Ethernet Fabric switching solutions based on its patented vSCALE™ technology for data centers and high-performance computing (HPC) clusters, today announced that the ATLAS compute cluster at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Hannover, Germany, achieved top ranking among the 285 Gigabit Ethernet clusters in the most recent TOP500 list of supercomputer sites. The ATLAS cluster successfully leverages the Dynamic Congestion Avoidance feature in Woven’s 10 Gigabit Ethernet (GE) fabric to reach a performance level of 32.8 Teraflops, making it the fastest Ethernet cluster in the world today.

“What is remarkable about the ATLAS cluster is that we were able to take the lead very cost-effectively with a creative combination of more processors at lower clock rates and a higher Ethernet switching efficiency,” explained Professor Bruce Allen, director of the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics. “Woven’s 10 Gigabit Ethernet Fabric switch is able to deliver sustained performance at an impressive 64 percent of the theoretical peak. The HPC Linpack experts we consulted tell us that they have never seen such a high level of Ethernet efficiency on such a large cluster. Without the Woven switch, ATLAS would not be the world’s fastest Ethernet cluster. It’s that simple.”

The Institute attributes Woven’s unprecedented efficiency to the vSCALE ASIC’s Dynamic Congestion Avoidance capability that is constantly balancing traffic loads intelligently and in real-time along available paths in the non-blocking 10 GE fabric. A cluster’s computational efficiency is critical to its performance, and efficiency is determined by the network’s ability to handle inter-processor communications. The efficiency is calculated using the Linpack benchmark from the ratio of the actual performance to the theoretical peak performance for all processors in the cluster. Of the 285 Gigabit Ethernet clusters on the Top 500 List, only six achieved a computational efficiency greater than 60 percent and of those, ATLAS was the most powerful. Of the remaining Gigabit Ethernet clusters, 76 had efficiencies of 50 percent or less; 97 had efficiencies of 51-55 percent and 106 had efficiencies of 56-60 percent.

Woven Systems Inc.

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