Microsoft will make a release candidate version of its high performance
computing software, HPC Server 2008, available for download next week.
Key features in the HPC Server
2008 RC, include NetworkDirect, Microsoft's new direct memory access (RDMA)
interface, new scalable cluster management tools, and an service-oriented
architecture (SOA) job scheduler.
Microsoft is also touting cluster interoperability achieved through its
embrace of standards like the HPC Basic Profile (HPCBP), a specification
produced by the Open Grid Forum (OGF).
Industry observers say that Microsoft will have a tough task in the HPC
market, which is currently dominated by Linux systems. In a recent interview
with IT Week, Bordan Tkachuk, Viglen CEO, said that Viglen had seen Microsoft
gain some traction in the HPC market.
“Microsoft’s HPC solution will have a hard time competing with Linux systems
– but if you’d asked me that question in late 2006 I’d have said ‘no chance’ –
today there is a chance and we have sold systems to some sites,” added Tkachuk.
Microsoft also announced at the International Supercomputing Conference in
Dresden, Germany that a system using its software had broken into the top 25 of
the world's top 500 most powerful
supercomputers. The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
system, a 1000-plus node cluster with 9,472 cores, which uses a beta version of
HPC Server 2008 was recently ranked 23rd, with a performance rated at 68.5
teraflops.
Microsoft's HPC general manager Kyril Faenov said that Microsoft's approach
to the HPC market was to be based on customers being able to cluster commodity
hardware to achieve performance, "The NSCA system demonstrates that Windows can
scale to the rarefied atmosphere of the top 25 supercomputing systems in the
world - which up to now have relied on dedicated, specialised hardware and
software,” he said.
Comments
Have your say on this article