HomeArchitecture Taking High Performance Computing Mainstream with Microsoft
Taking High Performance Computing Mainstream with Microsoft ByDarryl K. Taft 2008-09-24
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At the High Performance on Wall Street conference, Microsoft’s high performance computing honcho, Bill Laing announced Windows HPC Server 2008. Microsoft’s goal is to take HPC mainstream and make Windows an alternative to Linux and Unix for HPC customers, particularly in the financial sector.
NEW
YORK — Underscoring the importance of the financial sector in the push
to take high performance computing mainstream, Microsoft announced the
release to manufacturing of its latest entry into the HPC arena,
Microsoft Windows HPC Server 2008, at the High Performance on Wall
Street conference here.
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"Today we're announcing the availability of Windows HPC Server 2008
and you can download an evaluation copy today," said Bill Laing,
corporate vice president of Microsoft's Windows Server and Solutions
Division, during his keynote address at the High Performance on Wall
Street event here on Sept. 22.
Laing, who leads Microsoft's drive to take HPC mainstream, said the
Windows HPC Server 2008 technology was "not built by engineers just
sitting in Redmond, but we went out to customers and spent time finding
out what they needed. There were more than 3,000 downloads of the beta
and we worked with more than 60 ISVs" to get the product out.
"The HPC industry uses mostly Linux or UNIX servers. To even suggest
Windows could be successful in HPC is blasphemy. To build our second
release we went to customers, especially customers who didn’t use
Windows. We conducted over 100 customer visits. We did internships,
where we would work on-site with HPC admins and developers. We created
a customer advisory board with leading HPC experts from computational
finance, engineering, government, academia and the life sciences and
they were brutally honest with their feedback. We assisted several ISVs
with their ports to Windows and conducted five separate weeklong
performance deep-dives with ISVs where we not only helped port, analyze
and tune their codes but we helped with improving concurrency in
general. In the process we ate a lot of humble pie while learning how
people really use their HPC servers: job schedulers, deployment tools,
cluster administration tools, compilers, debuggers and MPI stacks."
Laing said Microsoft worked with a core group of Microsoft customers
in honing the Windows HPC Server 2008 technology, including Boeing, the
Ferrari Formula 1 team and Proctor & Gamble.
Microsoft had three primary drivers behind the delivery of its new
HPC offering: to deliver a better programming experience for HPC, to
deliver a better administrative experience and to deliver higher
performance in the HPC space, Laing said.
Kyril Faenov, general manager of the HPC team at Microsoft, said
Windows HPC Server 2008 makes it easier to take computations from the
desktop and move them to a cluster. The product also features automatic
diagnostics suites that test latency, a comprehensive console that
allows users to look at all nodes and built-in reporting. "All record
information and usage information of the clients is recorded in a
database" and made available for reporting, Faenov said.
Meanwhile, in addition to the core group of customer organizations
that helped Microsoft hone the product, Microsoft also helped some
early adopters take advantage of the technology for ongoing work.
Ricky Higgins, IT director in the products and markets group at
Lloyds TSB Corporate Markets, said his organization was in the midst of
an upgrade of its IT infrastructure and Microsoft was able to help them
seamlessly migrate their systems ahead of schedule with the Microsoft
HPC platform. "HPC was a natural progression for us," Higgins said,
noting that the Microsoft HPC offering is similar to other products the
company uses. "There was minimal disruption because there were few
training and usability issues," since Lloyds TSB users were familiar
with the Microsoft technology.
"Microsoft believes HPC means more than high performance computing;
it also means high-productivity computing," Laing said, noting that he
has been working on operating systems for 35 years and decided to come
to Microsoft nine years ago to "bring high-end features into the
mainstream. And I believe the financial sector is critical to helping
to drive adoption of HPC into the mainstream."
As part of the Microsoft Dynamic IT initiative, the company is
pushing application development and deployment processes that will
focus on the use of models, Laing said. "We want to enable customers to
be more agile and dynamic," he added.
Moreover, HPC also is a driver for parallel computing, Laing said.
"We cannot keep increasing the clock speeds of processors, so software
needs to use parallelism to support multiple cores, and we're working
to make the use of parallel computing transparent to users. We're
extending our parallel computing strategy from the desktop to servers
to the cloud. And we're going to make it easy for developers by deeply
investing in parallel development tools and languages."
Added Faenov: "We're making further investment to make parallel programming much easier, starting with F#
and the Parallel Extensions to the .NET Framework." And Microsoft is
enabling developers to build HPC applications with Visual Studio, he
said.
"We're making supercomputer performance available to companies that might otherwise not be able to afford it," Laing said.
Traditionally, HPC has been separate from the mainstream computing
environments, requiring specialized tools, talent, hardware and
software, Laing said. "But we would like to see a single infrastructure
where information workers access the HPC horsepower they need.”
Laing noted that Microsoft teamed with Cray and Intel to deliver a
"personal supercomputer" and that the company would be raffling one of
the cabinet-size $25,000 machines off at its reception later in the day.
"Even the skeptics are taking notice of this announcement," Waite
said. "All of our customer focus and performance work means we can
create affordable, easy-to-use supercomputing solutions. This, in turn,
means HPC can go further into the mainstream. Cray is a big believer in
this model and the Cray CX1 fits under your desk. Whoa! Now, instead of
waiting for hours to run your job on the big supercomputer you can run
your models on the supercomputer in your office, saving the big jobs
for the big cluster and running your regular jobs immediately."
Meanwhile, in a separate announcement at the HPC on Wall Street
event, IBM announced it will offer remote $99 test drives of
Microsoft’s Windows HPC Server 2008 via IBM’s network of Computing on
Demand facilities.