SGI Releases New HPC Blade Platform


By Allison Proffitt
SGI announced the Altix ICE product today, positioned to bridge the divide between the high-throughput and high-performance environments. Altix ICE is based on the Intel 5000X chipset and features 32GB of memory per blade, with up to 512 Intel Xeon processor cores per rack delivering 6 TFLOPS of performance.

“Customers are tired of clusters,” SGI sciences segment manager, Michael Brown, told Bio-IT World, listing problems such as productivity disappointments and struggles powering and cooling clusters. But the Altix ICE solution should alleviate many of the headaches associated with clusters.

ICE is centered on several new technologies combined to offer what SGI promises is breakthrough reliability, density, simplicity, and power and cooling options. SGI expects these advances to make ICE a logical solution for life science tasks requiring both multiple CPU cores per job as well as multiple parallel jobs.

ICE is n+1 configured, so that power and cooling backups are redundant, but conserved. If a power supply or fan fails, the system is hot-swapped to the remaining supplies until the problem can be fixed.  Paired with SGI’s “ESP” software that contacts SGI when a feature malfunctions, the configuration is reliable but efficient.

“We’ve had SGI call [an ICE early user] about a fan failure, and the site didn’t even know there was a problem,” said Brown. The fixes were made without any system interruption.

Using SGI Altix 4700 innovations, the system runs at 76% energy efficiency at the rack level, and is cooled with a multi-door water cooling system. Especially for smaller bioscience operations, where space is a premium, said Brown, the dense configuration of each rack and the efficiency of the cooling system will allow organizations to pack more racks into smaller space.

Finally, Brown touted the system’s scalability and performance. Operating system synchronization is integrated across nodes. A 2% increase in overhead efficiency, said Brown, can lead to a three-fold increase in computing power by conserving wasted cycles. In addition, InfiniBand connected storage is faster than local disk storage. The result, he said, is a system that functions “much closer to a single system than clusters,” for less cost.

The system, which is free of cables and connects with a duel InfiniBand backplane can be installed and running in two hours, Brown said. It is available today in configurations ranging from 8 to 512 processors per rack.

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