Big Blue's open-source computer beats Cray

By Ed Scannell
InfoWorld Electric


Posted at 4:42 AM PT, Mar 13, 1999
Trying to burnish its engineering image as well as demonstrate the
technical possibilities of Linux, IBM showed an "open-source
supercomputer'' at the LinuxWorld Expo, held earlier this month, that was
built around a cluster of Pentium II Xeon chips.

Using a subset of the Beowulf clustering technology, 17 of IBM's Netfinity
servers containing 36 Pentium II chips and running an off-the-shelf copy of
Linux matched the scalability and performance of a Cray supercomputer. The
IBM system executed a computer graphics-rendering application called the
PovRay benchmark.

The PovRay benchmark is intended to serve as a guide for the relative
mathematical performance of a wide variety of chips, systems, and
compilers. It is a ray-tracing, image-rendering application with which a
picture or image can be inserted in a movie such as Toy Story or Antz and
subsequently be rendered displaying all of the shadows and the rays of
light falling relative to that picture or image.

"It is a big computational job. Ten years ago it would take a [Digital
Equipment] VAX [minicomputer] 10 or 15 minutes to do. A Cray can do it in 3
seconds today,'' said Tom Figgatt, IBM's e-business manager, in Somers, N.Y.

During the demonstration, IBM's Linux-based supercomputer matched the
current benchmark record of 3 seconds, which was set by the Cray
T3t-900-AC64. That mark had surpassed what is now the second-fastest time
of 9 seconds.

The message IBM was trying to convey to users is that Linux has some innate
capabilities for linking together parallel computers that are not only
working in clusters but also working robustly using existing hardware and
software off the shelf or from the Web.

"I think we showed how easily Linux clusters together and allows you to
link multiple systems readily so you can spread your workload across
multiple systems,'' Figgatt said.

In addition to the 17 servers, IBM used a 100MB Ethernet network and hub to
connect the servers, and a piece of parallel computing software to ensure
the system's computations connected. As for the copy of Red Hat's Linux,
IBM purchased it at a local Barnes & Noble the day before the demonstration.

Although the demonstration of the application would be considered exotic by
most Fortune 1000 companies, IBM officials said they believe many
commercial accounts need this level of computing power for many of the
company's existing and upcoming electronic-commerce applications.

The advantage of the IBM-based system over the Cray, of course, is its more
attractive price performance, according to company officials. The
Netfinity/Linux benchmark was executed on approximately $150,000 worth of
equipment, while the cost of the Cray was $5.5 million, IBM's officials said.

IBM also used the demonstration to flex the muscles of its X-architecture
features and capabilities, which now are included in all of IBM's servers
up to the mainframe-class machines. For example, during one of the
rendering demonstrations IBM took one of the servers offline. The rendering
screen missed several pixels during the fail-over process, but it filled
them in by the time the rendering was complete.

The benchmark results are available at www.haveland.com/povbench. Users
must click on the button labeled "list all parallel results.''

IBM Corp., in Armonk, N.Y., can be reached at www.ibm.com

Ed Scannell is an InfoWorld editor at large.


From MAILER-DAEMON@cs.depaul.edu Tue Mar 16 00:13:35 1999