Strong Gains For Co-Processors And Big Data At HPC Sites: IDC

Strong Gains For Co-Processors And Big Data At HPC Sites: IDC

FP Archives February 3, 2017, 00:06:50 IST

IDC finds substantially increased penetration of co-processors and accelerators at HPC sites, along with the large proportion of sites that are applying Big Data technologies and methods.

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Strong Gains For Co-Processors And Big Data At HPC Sites: IDC

The proportion of high performance computing (HPC) sites employing co-processors and accelerators more than doubled during the past two years, and a surprising two thirds of HPC sites are now performing Big Data analysis as part of their HPC workloads, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC) Worldwide Study of HPC End-User Sites. The 2013 study included sites representing 905 HPC systems, more than double the 488 systems profiled in the 2011 version of the study, IDC announced at the International Supercomputing Conference in Leipzig.

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Highlights from the study include:

  • The proportion of sites employing co-processors or accelerators in their HPC systems jumped from 28.2 percent in the 2011 version of the study to 76.9 percent in 2013. Co-processors/accelerators advanced from slightly more than 1 percent of all processor parts in 2011 to 3.4 percent in 2013, with Intel Xeon Phi co-processors and NVIDIA GPUs running neck and neck for leadership, and FPGAs in a respectable third-place position. The use of co-processors and accelerators is still wider than it is deep, meaning that these newer devices have entered many more sites but are often still used for exploratory purposes.

  • 67 percent of the sites in the 2013 study said they perform Big Data analysis on their HPC systems, with 30 percent of the available computing cycles devoted on average to Big Data analysis work. IDC did not ask about Big Data analysis in the 2011 version of the study.

  • The 2013 end-user study also confirmed the IDC supply-side research finding that storage is the fastest-growing technology area at HPC sites.

The proportion of sites exploiting cloud computing to address parts of their HPC workloads rose from 13.8 percent in 2011 to 23.5 percent in 2013, with public and private cloud use about equally represented among the 2013 sites." The most surprising finding of the 2013 study is the substantially increased penetration of co-processors and accelerators at HPC sites around the world, along with the large proportion of sites that are applying Big Data technologies and methods to their problems," said Earl Joseph, Program Vice President for Technical Computing at IDC.

Written by FP Archives

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