Infrastructure renewal/en: Difference between revisions

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Welcome to the ARC/Cloud renewal transition documentation for the Digital Research Alliance of Canada (the Alliance). This is the primary source for users with questions about the upgrade of our HPC/Cloud infrastructure. The upgrade will replace the nearly 80% of our current HPC and Community Cloud equipment which is approaching end-of-life.  
Welcome to the ARC/Cloud renewal transition documentation for the Digital Research Alliance of Canada (the Alliance). This is the primary source for users with questions about the upgrade of our HPC/Cloud infrastructure. The upgrade will replace the nearly 80% of our current HPC and Community Cloud equipment which is approaching end-of-life.  


= What's coming in 2025? =
= New for 2025 =
In 2023, The Digital Research Alliance of Canada was given formal approval and funding for a complete replacement of aging national systems.  
In 2023, The Digital Research Alliance of Canada was given formal approval and funding for a complete replacement of aging national systems.  
The new equipment will offer:
The new equipment will offer:
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= Status Updates =
= Status updates =


For current outages please see the [https://status.computecanada.ca system status page].
For current outages please see the [https://status.computecanada.ca system status page].
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= Technical Specifications =
= Technical specifications =


The sites cannot yet provide detailed technical specifications of the new systems. Generally, the new systems will be similar in architecture to the old systems but with considerably increased capacity and performance. For instance, we expect to have fewer compute nodes, but each node will have a significant increase in the number of cores due to the increase in the size of multi-core CPUs since 2017.
The sites cannot yet provide detailed technical specifications of the new systems. Generally, the new systems will be similar in architecture to the old systems but with considerably increased capacity and performance. For instance, we expect to have fewer compute nodes, but each node will have a significant increase in the number of cores due to the increase in the size of multi-core CPUs since 2017.
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