IBM Scalable POWERparallel

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IBM Scalable POWERparallel
ORNL History (31550428397).jpg
Also known asIBM RS/6000 SP
DeveloperIBM
TypeSupercomputer platform
Release dateFeb 1993 (Feb 1993)
DiscontinuedOct 2000 (Oct 2000)
CPUIBM POWER
PowerPC
SuccessorIBM Blue Gene

Scalable POWERparallel (SP) is a series of supercomputers from IBM. SP systems were part of the IBM RISC System/6000 (RS/6000) family, and were also called the RS/6000 SP. The first model, the SP1, was introduced in February 1993, and new models were introduced throughout the 1990s until the RS/6000 was succeeded by eServer pSeries in October 2000. The SP is a distributed memory system, consisting of multiple RS/6000-based nodes interconnected by an IBM-proprietary switch called the High Performance Switch (HPS). The nodes are clustered using software called PSSP, which is mainly written in Perl.

Computer scientist Marc Snir was awarded the Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers in 2013 for his contributions to supercomputing, which included his work on the SP.[1]

Notable systems[]

  • The Cornell Theory Center had a 512-node system that was ranked as the sixth fastest supercomputer in the world by the November 1995 edition of the Top500 List. From a peak performance of 136.19 GFLOPS, it obtained 88.40 GFLOPS on the LINPACK benchmark.[2]
  • Deep Blue, the first computer to win a chess game against a reigning world champion in a match with Garry Kasparov in 1996.
  • ASCI Blue Pacific is a PowerPC 604-based system with a peak performance of 3.9 TFLOPS. It was installed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in 1998 as part of the Advanced Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI).
  • ASCI White is a 512-node system with a peak performance of 12.3 TFLOPS. It was installed at the LLNL in 2001 as part of ASCI, and was ranked #1 in the Top500 List from November 2000 to November 2001.
  • Seaborg, at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, was ranked as the fifth fastest supercomputer in the world when it debuted in the June 2003 edition of the Top500 List. From a peak performance of 9.98 TFLOPS, it obtained 7.30 TFLOPS on the LINPACK benchmark.[3]

Nodes[]

POWER1-based[]

Model # of CPUs CPU CPU MHz Cache Memory Introduced Discontinued
SP1 1 POWER1++ 62.5 None 64 to 256 MB 1993-02-02 1994-12-16

POWER2-based[]

Model # of CPUs CPU CPU MHz L2 Cache Memory Introduced Discontinued
Thin Node 1 POWER2 66 ? 64 to 512 MB 1994-04-06[4] 1996-07-26[5]
Thin Node 2 ? 64 to 512 MB 1995-02-07[6] 1997-06-27[7]
Wide Node ? 64 MB to 2 GB 1994-04-06[4] 1996-07-26[5]
77MHz Wide Node 77 ? 64 MB to 2 GB 1995-08-22[8] 1997-06-27[7]

PowerPC 604-based[]

Model # of CPUs CPU CPU MHz Cache Memory Introduced Discontinued
High 1 2, 4, 6, 8 PowerPC 604 112 ? ? 1996-07-23 1998-01-08
High 2 PowerPC 604e 200 ? ? 1997-08-26 1998-04-21
332 Thin 2, 4 332 ? ? 1998-04-21 2000-12-29
332 Wide ? ?

P2SC-based[]

Model # of CPUs CPU CPU MHz Cache Memory Introduced Discontinued
160 Thin 1 P2SC 160 ? ? 1997-10-06 1998-04-21
Thin P2SC 120 ? ? 1996-10-08
Wide P2SC 135 ? ?

POWER3-based[]

Model # of CPUs CPU CPU MHz L2 Cache Memory Introduced Discontinued
POWER3 High 2, 4, 6, 8 POWER3 222 ? ? 1999-09-13 2000-12-29
POWER3 High POWER3-II 375 ? ? 2000-07-18 2002-12-27
POWER3 Thin 1, 2 POWER3 200 ? ? 1999-09-01 2000-06-30
POWER3 Thin POWER3-II 375 ? ? 2000-02-07 2003-04-08
POWER3 Thin 450 ? ? 2002-01-22
POWER3 Wide 1, 2 POWER3 200 ? ? 1999-02-01 2000-06-30
POWER3 Wide 2, 4 POWER3-II 375 ? ? 2000-02-07 2003-04-08
POWER3 Wide 2, 4 450 ? ? 2002-01-22

See also[]

  • Blue Gene

References[]

  1. ^ "Marc Snir: 2013 Seymour Cray Award Recipient". IEEE Computer Society.
  2. ^ "SP2/512". TOP500 Supercomputer Sites. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Seaborg - SP Power3 375 MHz 16 way". TOP500 Supercomputer Sites. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  4. ^ a b IBM Announcement Letter ZG94-0159: IBM Scalable POWERparallel Systems 9076 SP2 and Enhancements for SP1
  5. ^ a b IBM Announcement 996-181: Hardware Withdrawal: RISC System/6000 SP POWERquery and Selected Models and Features -- Replacements Available
  6. ^ IBM Announcement Letter ZG95-0145: 9076 POWERparallel SP2 Models 204, 304, 3B4, and 404
  7. ^ a b IBM Announcement Letter 997-078: Hardware Withdrawal: Selected RS/6000 Models and Features -- Replacements Available
  8. ^ IBM Announcement Letter ZG95-0364: RISC SYSTEM/6000 SP 77MHz Wide Models, 2AX Models, and Enhancements

External links[]

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