high performance computing
 
|
Myrinet2000 Interconnect (optional)
Myrinet is a cost-effective, high-performance, packet-communication and
switching technology that is widely used to interconnect clusters of
workstations, PCs, servers, or single-board computers. Clusters provide
an economical way of achieving:
high performance, by distributing demanding computations across an array
of cost-effective hosts. For "tightly coupled" distributed computations,
the interconnect must provide high-data-rate and low-latency
communication between host processes.
high availability, by allowing a computation to proceed with a subset of
the hosts. The interconnect should be capable of detecting and isolating
faults, and of using alternative communication paths.
Conventional networks such as Ethernet can be used to build clusters,
but do not provide the performance or features required for
high-performance or high-availability clustering. Characteristics that
distinguish Myrinet from other networks include:
- Full-duplex 2+2 Gigabit/second data rate links, switch
ports, and interface ports.
- Flow control, error control, and "heartbeat" continuity
monitoring on every link.
- Low-latency, cut-through, crossbar switches, with
monitoring for high-availability applications.
- Switch networks that can scale to tens of thousands of
hosts, and that can also provide alternative communication paths between
hosts.
- Host interfaces that execute a control program to
interact directly with host processes ("OS bypass") for low-latency
communication, and directly with the network to send, receive, and
buffer packets.
More information about Myrinet:
Learn more about the hpcLine
|
|
system description | |
|
|
|
computenodes | |
|
|
|
printversion | |
|
|
|
communication network | |
|
|
|
|