Niagara: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 134: | Line 134: | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li><p>Those of you new to SciNet, but with 2018 RAC allocations on Niagara, have had your accounts created and ready for you to login.</p></li> | <li><p>Those of you new to SciNet, but with 2018 RAC allocations on Niagara, have had your accounts created and ready for you to login.</p></li> | ||
<li><p>New, non-RAC users: we are still working out the procedure to get access. If you can't wait, for now, you can follow the old route of requesting a SciNet Consortium Account on the [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca CCDB site], or write to support@scinet.utoronto.ca.</p></li></ul> | <li><p>New, non-RAC users: we are still working out the procedure to get access. If you can't wait, for now, you can follow the old route of requesting a SciNet Consortium Account on the [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/me/facilities CCDB site], or write to support@scinet.utoronto.ca.</p></li></ul> | ||
== Getting started == <!--T:25--> | == Getting started == <!--T:25--> |
Revision as of 04:31, 12 April 2018
Expected availability: April 2018 |
Login node: niagara.computecanada.ca |
Globus endpoint: TBA |
System Status Page: https://wiki.scinet.utoronto.ca/wiki/index.php/System_Alerts |
Niagara is a homogeneous cluster, owned by the University of Toronto and operated by SciNet, intended to enable large parallel jobs of 1040 cores and more. It was designed to optimize throughput of a range of scientific codes running at scale, energy efficiency, and network and storage performance and capacity.
The user experience on Niagara will be similar to that on Graham and Cedar, but slightly different. Specific instructions for Niagara can be found in the Niagara Quickstart.
Niagara is an allocatable resource in the 2018 Resource Allocation Competition (RAC 2018), which has come into effect on April 4, 2018.
Niagara installation update at the SciNet User Group Meeting on February 14th, 2018
Niagara installation time-lag video
Niagara hardware specifications[edit]
- 1500 nodes, each with 40 Intel Skylake cores at 2.4GHz, for a total of 60,000 cores.
- 202 GB (188 GiB) of RAM per node.
- EDR Infiniband network in a so-called 'Dragonfly+' topology.
- 6PB of scratch, 3PB of project space (parallel filesystem: IBM Spectrum Scale, formerly known as GPFS).
- 256 TB burst buffer (Excelero + IBM Spectrum Scale).
- No local disks.
- No GPUs.
- Rpeak of 4.61 PF.
- Rmax of 3.0 PF.
- 685 kW power consumption.
Attached storage systems[edit]
Home space 600TB total volume Parallel high-performance filesystem (IBM Spectrum Scale) |
|
Scratch space 6PB total volume Parallel high-performance filesystem (IBM Spectrum Scale) |
|
Burst buffer 256TB total volume Parallel extra high-performance filesystem (Excelero+IBM Spectrum Scale) |
|
Project space 3PB total volume. Parallel high-performance filesystem (IBM Spectrum Scale |
|
Archive Space 10PB total volume High Performance Storage System (IBM HPSS) |
High-performance interconnect[edit]
The Niagara cluster has an EDR Infiniband network in a so-called 'Dragonfly+' topology, with four wings. Each wing of maximually 432 nodes (i.e., 17280) has 1-to-1 connections. Network traffic between wings is done through adaptive routing, which alleviates network congestion and yields an effective blocking of 2:1 between nodes of different wings.
Node characteristics[edit]
- CPU: 2 sockets with 20 Intel Skylake cores (2.4GHz, AVX512), for a total of 40 cores per node
- Computational performance: 3 TFlops theoretical peak.
- Network connection: 100Gb/s EDR Dragonfly+
- Memory: 202 GB (188 GiB) of RAM, i.e., a bit over 4GiB per core.
- Local disk: none. GPUs/Accelerators: none.
- Operating system: Linux CentOS 7
Scheduling[edit]
The Niagara cluster uses the Slurm scheduler to run jobs. The basic scheduling commands are therefore similar to those for Cedar and Graham, with a few differences:
- Scheduling is by node only. This means jobs always need to use multiples of 40 cores per job.
- Asking for specific amounts of memory is not be necessary and is discouraged; all nodes have the same amount of memory (202GB/188GiB minus some operating system overhead).
Details, such as how to request burst buffer usage in jobs, are still being worked out.
Software[edit]
- Module-based software stack.
- Both the standard Compute Canada software stack as well as cluster-specific software tuned for Niagara are available.
- In contrast with Cedar and Graham, no modules are loaded by default to prevent accidental conflicts in versions. To load the software stack that a user would see on Graham and Cedar, one can load the "CCEnv" module (see Niagara Quickstart).
Access and Migration to Niagara[edit]
Migration for Existing Users of SciNet Systems[edit]
- Accounts, $HOME & $PROJECT of active GPC users have been transferred to Niagara (except dot-files in ~).
- Data stored in $SCRATCH has not been, and will not be, transfered automatically.
- Users are to clean up $SCRATCH on the GPC as much as possible (remember it's temporary data!). Then they can transfer what they need using datamover nodes. Let us know if you need help.
- To enable this transfer, there will be a short period during which you can have access to Niagara as well as to the GPC storage resources. This period will end no later than May 9, 2018.
New Users (without a previous SciNet account)[edit]
Those of you new to SciNet, but with 2018 RAC allocations on Niagara, have had your accounts created and ready for you to login.
New, non-RAC users: we are still working out the procedure to get access. If you can't wait, for now, you can follow the old route of requesting a SciNet Consortium Account on the CCDB site, or write to support@scinet.utoronto.ca.
Getting started[edit]
See Niagara Quickstart.