Architectural Constraints Required to Attain 1 Exaflop/s for Scientific Applications
IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS) 2011
Publication Type: Talk
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Summary
The first Teraflop/s computer, the ASCI Red, became operational in 1997, and it took more than 11 years for a Petaflop/s performance machine, the IBM Roadrunner, to appear on the Top500 list. Efforts have begun to study the hardware and software challenges for building an exascale machine. It is important to understand and meet these challenges in order to reach Exaflop/s performance. This paper presents a feasibility study of three important application classes to formulate the constraints that these classes will impose on the machine architecture for achieving a sustained performance of 1 Exaflop/s.
The application classes being considered in this paper are -- classical molecular dynamics, cosmological simulations and unstructured mesh computations. We analyze the problem sizes required for representative applications to achieve 1 Exaflop/s and the hardware requirements in terms of the network and memory. Based on the analysis for achieving an Exaflop/s, we also discuss the performance of these applications for much smaller problem sizes.
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