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Breaking Barriers: Upgrading California's Inter-Campus Connectivity

CENIC invests $14M in upgrading inter-campus network services, enabling seamless data and computing across campuses.

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Breaking Barriers: Upgrading California's Inter-Campus Connectivity

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  1. CENIC is Removing the Inter-Campus Barriers in California Now Campuses Need to Upgrade ~ $14M Invested in Upgrade Source: Jim Dolgonas, CENIC

  2. The “Golden Spike” UCSD Experimental Optical Core:Ready to Couple Users to CENIC L1, L2, L3 Services Currently: >= 60 endpoints at 10 GigE >= 30 Packet switched >= 30 Switched wavelengths >= 400 Connected endpoints Approximately 0.5 Tbps Arrive at the “Optical” Center of Hybrid Campus Switch CENIC L1, L2 Services Lucent Glimmerglass Force10 Funded by NSF MRI Grant Cisco 6509 OptIPuter Border Router Source: Phil Papadopoulos, SDSC/Calit2 (Quartzite MRI PI, OptIPuter co-PI)

  3. Network Today Quartzite

  4. Calit2 SunlightOptical Exchange Contains Quartzite Maxine Brown, EVL, UIC OptIPuter Project Manager

  5. What the Network Enables Data, Computing anywhere on Campus Always-on high-resolution streaming Large-scale data movement w/o impacting commodity net. Complete re-factoring of where network-connected resources are located

  6. Campus Fiber Network Based on Quartzite Allowed UCSD CI Design Team to Architect Shared Resources UCSD Storage HPC System Cluster Condo PetaScale Data Analysis Facility UC Grid Pilot Digital Collections Lifecycle Management Research Cluster OptiPortal DNA Arrays, Mass Spec., Microscopes, Genome Sequencers Research Instrument N x 10Gbe Source: Phil Papadopoulos, SDSC/Calit2

  7. Triton – A Downpayment on Campus-scale CI • Standard Compute Cluster (256 nodes, 2048 Cores, 6TB RAM) • Large-memory Cluster (28 nodes, 896 cores, 9TB RAM) • Large-scale storage • At baby stage with 180TB and 4GB/sec • Goal is ~4PB and 100GB/sec BW • Structure managed with Rocks. An open system. • Will also function as a high-performance cloud platform

  8. TritonResource: Expect initial production on compute systems ~June 2009Data Oasis storage system expected fall 2009

  9. Triton Designed for Particular Apps • Overriding need for Large Memory nodes • 8 @ 512GB, 20 @ 256GB (4 dedicated as DB’s) A Small Sampling: • Regional Ocean Circulation (COMPAS @ Scripps) • Scalable algorithm + single node optimization step (> 150GB memory needed) • 3D Tomographic Reconstruction of EM Images (Medicine) • 256, 512GB “on the small side” • DNA Sequence Analysis with short sequence reads - > 128 GB • Human Heart Full Beat Simulation (Bioengineering) • 100 – 200 GB • Drug discovery and design from first principles.

  10. Triton Network Connectivity • Total Switch Capacity – 512 X 10 Gbit/sec = 5 Tbit/s ($150K) • 32 x 10GbE to Campus Networks including at least 5x10GbE to Quartzite OptIPuter. • All external-to-UCSD high-speed networks could terminate on Triton at full rate Mid Construction – Large Memory Nodes Integrated into Switch (28 nodes, 40Gbit/s/Node)

  11. The NSF-Funded GreenLight ProjectGiving Users Greener Compute and Storage Options • Measure and Control Energy Usage: • Sun Has Shown up to 40% Reduction in Energy • Active Management of Disks, CPUs, etc. • Measures Temperature at 5 Levels in 8 Racks • Power Utilization in Each of the 8 Racks • Chilled Water Cooling Systems UCSD Structural Engineering Dept. Conducted Sun MD Tests May 2007 UCSD (Calit2 & SOM) Bought Two Sun MDs May 2008 Source: Tom DeFanti, Calit2; GreenLight PI

  12. The GreenLight Project: Instrumenting the Energy Cost of Computational Science • Focus on 5 Communities with At-Scale Computing Needs: • Metagenomics • Ocean Observing • Microscopy • Bioinformatics • Digital Media • Measure, Monitor, & Web Publish Real-Time Sensor Outputs • Via Service-oriented Architectures • Allow Researchers Anywhere To Study Computing Energy Cost • Enable Scientists To Explore Tactics For Maximizing Work/Watt • Develop Middleware that Automates Optimal Choice of Compute/RAM Power Strategies for Desired Greenness • Partnering With Minority-Serving Institutions Cyberinfrastructure Empowerment Coalition Source: Tom DeFanti, Calit2; GreenLight PI

  13. Research Needed on How to Deploy a Green CI MRI • Computer Architecture • Rajesh Gupta/CSE • Software Architecture • Amin Vahdat, Ingolf Kruger/CSE • CineGrid Exchange • Tom DeFanti/Calit2 • Visualization • Falko Kuster/Structural Engineering • Power and Thermal Management • Tajana Rosing/CSE • Analyzing Power Consumption Data • Jim Hollan/Cog Sci • Direct DC Datacenters • Tom Defanti, Greg Hidley http://greenlight.calit2.net

  14. New Techniques for Dynamic Power and Thermal Management to Reduce Energy Requirements • NSF Project Greenlight • Green Cyberinfrastructure in Energy-Efficient Modular Facilities • Closed-Loop Power &Thermal Management • Dynamic Power Management (DPM) • Optimal DPM for a Class of Workloads • Machine Learning to Adapt • Select Among Specialized Policies • Use Sensors and Performance Counters to Monitor • Multitasking/Within Task Adaptation of Voltage and Frequency • Measured Energy Savings of Up to 70% per Device • Dynamic Thermal Management (DTM) • Workload Scheduling: • Machine learning for Dynamic Adaptation to get Best Temporal and Spatial Profiles with Closed-Loop Sensing • Proactive Thermal Management • Reduces Thermal Hot Spots by Average 60% with No Performance Overhead System Energy Efficiency Lab (seelab.ucsd.edu) Prof. Tajana Šimunić Rosing, CSE, UCSD

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