For first time, China places more machines than the U.S. on Top500 list
U.S. concerns about Chinese competition emerged in 2010, when a system called Tianhe-1 briefly grabbed first place on the list. A follow-on system called Tianhe-2, which became No. 1 in 2013, rated about 34 quadrillion calculations per second—petaflops in industry parlance—on a set of standard tests. Sunway TaihuLight reached 93 petaflops on the same tests and has a theoretical top speed of 125.4 petaflops, Mr. Dongarra said.
The system emerges as China has been trying to reduce its reliance on U.S.-made chipsamid national security concerns in both countries. The Department of Commerce last year denied Intel’s request to export chips to four centers associated with Tianhe-2, alleging links to “nuclear explosive activities.” Chinese officials denied those charges and have used locally made chips to upgrade the system.
Officials at National Research Center of Parallel Computer Engineering & Technology, which developed Sunway TaihuLight, told Mr. Dongarra the machine is expected to be used in fields such as manufacturing, life sciences, computer-aided engineering, weather forecasting and modeling other earth systems.
Its processors come from the Shanghai High Performance IC Center, a state-owned company founded in 2003 that also produced chips for a system called Sunway Bluelight that attracted attention in 2011. Sunway TaihuLight, which is unusually energy-efficient as well as powerful, is a more significant accomplishment, Mr. Dongarra said.
The system comprises nearly 41,000 chips—each with 260 small calculating engines called processor cores—allowing designers to pack 10.65 million cores into 40 cabinets, he said. That compares to about 560,000 cores in the fastest U.S. supercomputer.
Peter Ungaro, chief executive of Seattle-based computer maker Cray Inc., called it an impressive machine. “We know that building a system of this size and complexity is no small task,” he said.
Wuxi, a city near Shanghai, is home to one of the country’s six supercomputing centers. It was funded by the so-called “863 program,” a central government plan to develop self-sufficiency in technologies deemed critical for national security and economic development.
The computer’s name is derived from that of a large freshwater lake that borders Wuxi. Sunway, which means “Divine Strength” or “Magical Strength,” also is a pun on the fact the chips inside them in Chinese are pronounced “Shenwei,” which means “Shanghai Strength” using an archaic term for Shanghai.
Intel, meanwhile, is using the conference in Frankfurt called ISC High Performance to unveil a new member of a chip line called Xeon Phi that is specifically designed for scientific calculations. Rival Nvidia Corp. is introducing the Tesla P100, which is designed to accelerate computing chores in systems that also use Intel chips.
Both companies hope to benefit as scientists begin to use supercomputers for analytical tasks associated with a technique called deep learning, in addition to traditional jobs like simulating natural phenomena. “We believe this dynamic will change how computers are created,” said Ian Buck, Nvidia’s vice president of accelerated computing.
Source: WSJ