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Guru3D.com » News » AMD EPYC CPUs, AMD Radeon Instinct GPUs to power Cray Supercomputer

AMD EPYC CPUs, AMD Radeon Instinct GPUs to power Cray Supercomputer

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 05/07/2019 01:47 PM | source: | 18 comment(s)
AMD EPYC CPUs, AMD Radeon Instinct GPUs to power Cray Supercomputer

AMD and Cray unveil what is expected to be the world’s fastest supercomputer – defining a new standard for high-performance computing and pushing the technology boundaries of computational science to take the industry into the Exascale era. 

The new system, called Frontier, is planned to come online in the U.S. in 2021 with over 1.5 exaflops of processing power. The total system contract award is valued at more than $600M USD for the system and technology development. Together with the Cray Shasta architecture, AMD is excited to build on leadership hardware and software with the singular vision of solving the toughest computing challenges in the world today. AMD innovations in Frontier include: 

  • High Performance Computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) optimized, custom AMD EPYC CPU and purpose-built Radeon Instinct GPU processors
  • High Bandwidth Memory (HBM)
  • Tightly integrated 4:1 GPU to CPU ratio
  • Custom, high-speed coherent Infinity Fabric connection
  • Enhanced, open ROCm programming environment for AMD CPUs and GPUs support.

With this announcement, AMD and Cray are driving a new HPC paradigm to support the complex compute, interconnect, software and storage requirements that Exascale computing demands.

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — May 7, 2019 — AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) today joined the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and Cray Inc. in announcing what is expected to be the world’s fastest exascale-class supercomputer, scheduled to be delivered to ORNL in 2021. To deliver what is expected to be more than 1.5 exaflops of expected processing performance, the Frontier system is designed to use future generation High Performance Computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) optimized, custom AMD EPYC™ CPU, and AMD Radeon™ Instinct GPU processors. Researchers at ORNL will use the Frontier system’s unprecedented computing power and next generation AI techniques to simulate, model and advance understanding of the interactions underlying the science of weather, sub-atomic structures, genomics, physics, and other important scientific fields.

“AMD is proud to partner with Cray and ORNL to deliver what is expected to be the world’s most powerful supercomputer,” said Forrest Norrod, senior vice president and general manager, AMD Datacenter and Embedded Systems Group. “Frontier will feature custom CPU and GPU technology from AMD and represents the latest achievement on a long list of technology innovations AMD has contributed to the Department of Energy exascale programs.”

AMD innovations to be used in the Frontier system include:

  • Future-generation High Performance Computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) optimized, custom AMD EPYC CPU, and Radeon Instinct GPU processors supported by High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) and extensive mixed precision ops for optimum deep learning performance;
  • A custom high-bandwidth, low-latency coherent Infinity Fabric, connecting four AMD Radeon Instinct GPUs to one AMD EPYC CPU per node;
  • An enhanced version of the open source ROCm programming environment, developed with Cray to tap into the combined performance of AMD CPUs and GPUs.

“We are excited to work with the team at AMD to deliver the Frontier system to Oak Ridge National Laboratory,” said Steve Scott, senior vice president and CTO at Cray. “Cray’s Shasta supercomputers are designed to support leading edge processor technologies and high-performance storage, all tightly interconnected by Cray’s new Slingshot network. The combination of Cray and AMD technology in the Frontier system will dramatically enhance performance at scale for AI, analytics, and simulation, enabling DOE to further push the boundaries of scientific discovery.”

AMD has a proud supercomputing history and a long-standing engagement with DOE, starting with the Jaguar supercomputer in 2005 and Titan supercomputer in 2011. The Frontier system leverages years of exascale technology investments by DOE. The contract award includes technology development funding, a center of excellence, several early-delivery systems, the main Frontier system and multi-year systems support. 

“Frontier represents the state-of-the art in high-performance computing. Designing and standing up a machine of its scope requires working closely with industry, partnerships which not only enable breakthrough science but also ensure American scientific and economic competitiveness on the global stage,” said Jeff Nichols, associate laboratory director for Computing and Computational Sciences, ORNL. “We are delighted to work with AMD to integrate the CPU and GPU technologies that enable this extremely capable accelerated node architecture.”

Additional Resources

  • AMD Exascale Computing Technologies
  • Cray Shasta Architecture

Follow AMD datacenter developments on Twitter @AMDServer







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schmidtbag
Senior Member



Posts: 7435
Joined: 2012-11-10

#5666935 Posted on: 05/08/2019 03:41 PM
As much as I'm happy for AMD's success and repeatedly remind people that AMD's GPUs are actually very good for compute workloads, it seems people here are getting a little bit carried away with their success in this situation. Supercomputers are a game of leapfrog. There's always one country, university, or corporation that releases the next best thing, using some company's latest-gen hardware, and then a few months later someone else does the same thing on a competing platform.

Trust me, soon enough there will be a server with Nvidia hardware ranking #1. And rest assured, they won't retain that position.

Texter
Senior Member



Posts: 3275
Joined: 2008-11-03

#5666947 Posted on: 05/08/2019 04:03 PM
Ah but a short decade ago...the good ole' days

Mind you...nVidia's Fermi supercomputer at ORNL already had AMD CPU's in it... :)

Aura89
Senior Member



Posts: 8408
Joined: 2008-07-31

#5667023 Posted on: 05/08/2019 07:25 PM
Look how tables turned, 2 most powerfull supercomputers are based on AMD(CPU/GPU) and Intel(CPU/GPU), don't you wonder why no Nvidia's GPU's?, IMO he gonna sell his leather jacket soon.


*Image from Anandtech.


You're comparing unreleased super computers that aren't even due to be out for another 2 years, minimum, to nvidias latest and greatest offering (by nvidia i mean a super computer that uses nvidia) from 2018, which is currently the fastest super computer out there, with no regard to the fact that....the two others aren't released and could have competition in 2021 by other, unannounced super computers, could utilize nvidia, etc.?

Sorry your point seems to be a lack of a point. Come back in 2021/22 when those super computers are up and running and then see if no one is using or planning on using nvidia beyond the Summit super computer, until then, it's a pre-mature "victory" based off a lack of evidence rather then actual historical evidence.

Just for clarification, i am happy that super computers are starting to use AMD products, even both in the same system, very happy, but this notion that because the only KNOWN 2 next super computers do not have nvidia in them, that somehow means nvidia has any issue whatsoever, financially, process, performance or otherwise, is just nonsense.

We know that EuroHPC JU is planning a 2022/23 exascale supercomputer, and we know they have at least 1.12 billion dollars to do so (whereas this articles stated one is at 600 million), and we don't know what it'll be using.

We know that there's at least one more exascale super computer in the USA planned for the same 2021/22 slot, the el capitan, and we don't know what it'll be using

There are articles out there claiming there will be 10 exascale super computers by 2023, and given the information we know, that doesn't sound terribly unlikely. So again, this whole "well 2 of the 10 don't use nvidia, therefore, nvidia has a problem!" is pure and utter nonsense. If none of the 10 have nvidia, then you can say there's an issue, then you can claim nvidia lost out big time.

HWgeek
Senior Member



Posts: 441
Joined: 2005-04-04

#5667288 Posted on: 05/09/2019 02:47 PM
You didn't get my point, for long time Nvidia's GPU's were the obvious choice for those Supercomputers and you see that AMD and Intel's started to get their place, on Self-driving vehicles sector all saw that there is an option to develop better Asics for their own needs with "little" money and 2~3 years, so it seems that NV gonna have harder life for near future.

Astyanax
Senior Member



Posts: 15723
Joined: 2018-03-21

#5667378 Posted on: 05/09/2019 06:05 PM
the cray supercomputer is built for a specific type of task that amd gpu's are better suited for.

its only the most powerful in terms of that task.

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