National systems: Difference between revisions

From Alliance Doc
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(updated Niagara CPU core count for 2020)
No edit summary
Line 56: Line 56:
<!--T:10-->
<!--T:10-->
General descriptions are also available on CCDB:
General descriptions are also available on CCDB:
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Graham-Compute Cedar-Compute]
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Cedar-Compute Cedar-Compute]
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Cedar-GPU Cedar-GPU]  
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Cedar-GPU Cedar-GPU]  
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Graham-Compute Graham-Compute]
* [https://ccdb.computecanada.ca/resources/Graham-Compute Graham-Compute]

Revision as of 21:54, 13 April 2020

Other languages:


Compute[edit]

Overview[edit]

Cedar, Graham and Béluga are similar systems with some differences in interconnect and the number of large memory, small memory and GPU nodes.

Name Description Capacity Status
CC-Cloud Resources

Arbutus
East.cloud
Cedar
Graham

OpenStack IAAS Cloud 17,272 cores In production
(integrates former west.cloud)
Béluga

heterogeneous, general-purpose cluster

  • Serial and small parallel jobs
  • GPU and big memory nodes
34,880 cores In production
Cedar

heterogeneous, general-purpose cluster

  • Serial and small parallel jobs
  • GPU and big memory nodes
  • Small cloud partition
94,528 cores In production
Graham

heterogeneous, general-purpose cluster

  • Serial and small parallel jobs
  • GPU and big memory nodes
  • Small cloud partition
41,548 cores In production
Niagara

homogeneous, large parallel cluster

  • Designed for large parallel jobs > 1000 cores
80,640 cores In production

All systems have large, high-performance attached storage. See National Data Cyberinfrastructure for an overview; follow the links above for individual system for details.

CCDB descriptions[edit]

General descriptions are also available on CCDB: