Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications

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Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications Logo
Formation2002
PurposeResearch Network
Region served
Europe

The Distributed European Infrastructure for Supercomputing Applications (DEISA) was a European Union supercomputer project. A consortium of eleven national supercomputing centres from seven European countries promoted pan-European research on European high-performance computing systems. By extending the European collaborative environment in the area of supercomputing, DEISA followed suggestions of the .

History[]

The DEISA project started as DEISA1 in 2002 developing and supporting a pan-European distributed high performance computing infrastructure. The initial project was funded by the European Commission in the sixth of the Framework Programmes for Research and Technological Development (FP6) from 2004 through 2008.[1] The funding continued for the follow-up project DEISA2 in the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7) through 2011.[2]

The DEISA infrastructure coupled eleven national supercomputing centres with a dedicated (mostly 10 Gbit/s) network connection provided by GÉANT2 on the European level and the national research and education networks (NRENs).

Consortium[]

There were 11 principal partners and four associate partners.

Principal partners were:

Associate partners were:

In 2011 services were taken over by the .

DEISA Benchmark Suite[]

DEISA produced a benchmark suite to help computer scientists assess the performance of parallel supercomputer systems. The benchmark comprises a number of real applications codes taken from a wide range of scientific disciplines. A structured framework allows compilation, execution and analysis to be configured and carried out via standard input files.

The codes were chosen as representative of the scientific projects performed on the DEISA supercomputers. The codes and associated datasets were selected for benchmarking systems with peak performances ranging up to hundreds of teraflops, machines which are more powerful than a desktop personal computer by factors of tens of thousands.

The suite contained codes relevant to astrophysics, fluid dynamics, climate modelling, biosciences, materials science, fusion power and fundamental particle physics. It has been run by DEISA on a range of its own supercomputers and records of the results are kept for comparison.[where?] The DEISA benchmark was used by the EU-funded PRACE project as a starting point for their investigations of benchmarks for the next generation of petaflop supercomputers.

References[]

  1. ^ "Distributed European Infrastructure for supercomputing applications". Project funding web site. CORDIS. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
  2. ^ "Distributed European infrastructure for supercomputing applications 2". Project funding web site. CORDIS. Retrieved 13 August 2013.


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