The students in the Commodity Track of the SC13 Student Cluster Competition faced quite a challenge: build at least a dual-node HPC cluster, but spend no more than $2,500.
There are lots of ways to go, of course. You can get the smallest/cheapest motherboards possible and string a bunch of them together – like harnessing a bunch of gerbils to pull a wagon. Or you could opt for two much more powerful PC-like nodes, which would be like using two medium-sized dogs to drag the load.
In the chart, we see how the three university teams (plus one group of high schoolers) solved the problem. (You can also see their creative approaches on the video blogs that look at each team’s creations.)
Click on chart to enlarge.
The stats on the chart also show quite a bit of variety. Slippery Rock went with two nodes driven by a couple of 8-core AMD CPUs and augmented with four NVIDIA GTX 660ti GPUs for a powerful punch on number-crunching. Team Rock also dispensed with the conventional gigabit Ethernet switch in favor of a direct Ethernet connection between their two nodes.
Arizona State opted for fewer nodes but more cores, and eschewed the accelerators in favor of more CPU power. As you’ll see in an upcoming video, they used a small set of drawers from IKEA to house their cluster – which was a very cool approach and garnered a lot of attention at the show.
Skyline didn’t put a lot of money into the aesthetics. They found some old PC cases and replaced the innards with as much computing goodness as they could fit into their $2,500 budget. Like Slippery Rock, they also went with the NVIDIA GTX 660 ti (must have been a sale on them), but didn’t configure quite as much memory as the other teams. It’s also interesting to see that these kids gathered a lot of support from their community to help defray their non-system costs. Good job on that.
The team fielded by Bentley University and Northeastern U took a different route. They fielded the only integrated hybrid CPU-GPU solution by using AMD’s A10 processors. This gave them a larger core count with enough budget room to score 72GB of RAM – significantly more than anyone else.
Our next articles will be video blogs that show the systems and chat with the teams about what they’re running and how they managed to stay under the dollar limit. Stay tuned…
Posted In: Latest News, SC 2013 Denver
Tagged: supercomputing, Student Cluster Competition, HPC, Slippery Rock University, Skyline High School, SC 2013, Arizona State University, Bentley University, Northeastern University, Commodity Track, Configurations
HPC_Guru
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#SC13 #SC13 Commodity Track configs http://t.co/cXUw0Gm2FP How did they spend their $2,500? #HPC via @Student_C_C
Student_C_C
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#SC13 #SC13 Commodity Track configs http://t.co/JcY32NUPuB How did they spend their $2,500? #HPC