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China Dominates the World TOP500 Supercomputers

This is a MUST READ article by Xinhua.

This is extremely neutral and correct analysis of the current supercomputing scene.


News Analysis: Great leap for Chinese-made supercomputers, but challenges remain
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Source: Xinhua | 2016-06-21 07:02:36 | Editor: huaxia

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WUXI, June 20, 2016 (Xinhua) -- Photo taken on June 20, 2016 shows Sunway TaihuLight, a new Chinese supercomputer, in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province. Performing 93 quadrillion calculations per second, Sunway TaihuLight dethroned China's Tianhe-2 from the top in a list of the 500 most powerful supercomputers in the world. Sunway TaihuLight, with 10,649,600 computing cores comprising 40,960 nodes, is twice as fast and three times as efficient as Tianhe-2, which has a performance of 33.86 quadrillion calculations per second, or petaflop/s. The new system was developed by the Chinese National Research Center of Parallel Computer Engineering & Technology and installed at the National Supercomputing Center in Wuxi. (Xinhua/Li Xiang)

WASHINGTON, June 20 (Xinhua) -- It's no longer big news that a Chinese supercomputer dominates a list of the world's fastest machines these days, but a No. 1 system built using entirely made-in-China chips instead of U.S. technology is no doubt a milestone.

China's Sunway TaihuLight, which is capable of performing 93 quadrillion calculations per second (petaflop/s), was on Monday declared having replaced Tianhe-2 as the world's most powerful supercomputer on the so-called Top500 list.

Tianhe-2, also a Chinese system, had previously topped the list for the past three years with a performance of 33.86 petaflop/s, but it's built with U.S.-made Intel chips.

Monday's announcement marked a great leap forward in China's ambitions to develop its homegrown computing and chipmaking industry. It's no secret China has a deep worry over foreign reliance, especially after the U.S. government announced an export ban on all high-performance computing chips to China last year.

Now, China's persistent supercomputing investment seems to be paying off.

"The Sunway TaihuLight system, based on a homegrown processor, demonstrates the significant progress that China has made in the domain of designing and manufacturing large-scale computation systems," said Jack Dongarra, professor of the University of Tennessee and editor of the list, in a report about the new supercomputer.

He said Sunway TaihuLight is running "sizeable applications," a fact that caused him to believe the system "is capable of running real applications and not just a stunt machine."

Depei Qian, a professor at Beihang University and the chief scientist of China's 863 project on high productivity computer and grid service environment, called the new system a "landmark event."

"This is the first time we use domestic processors to take the top spot on the Top500 list, marking a big step in China's development of self-controllable supercomputers," Qian told Xinhua. "This system is not only leading in computing performance, but also has technological breakthroughs in areas including energy efficiency and size. It's very impressive."

Zizhong Chen, a supercomputer expert at the University of California, Riverside (UCR), said Chinese should be proud of the Sunway TaihuLight system.

"It shows that with long-term efforts of Chinese computer experts, China's IT technology is developing rapidly," said Chen. "It also means that China has mastered the main core technologies for building supercomputers and therefore China's ability to compete in the supercomputing domain is getting stronger and stronger."

What is equally surprising for the latest list is that China also has more supercomputers than the United States, with 167 compared to 165. This is the first time the United States has lost the lead.

"It's a trend with China," Dongarra told Xinhua. "They had zero systems in 2001 and today they surpass the United States. No other nation has seen such rapid growth."

Dongarra noted that supercomputers are "more important than ever" as they provide capability benefiting a broad range of industries, including energy, pharmaceutics, aircraft, automobile and entertainment.

Experts, however, were quick to point out that China is still far from being a real challenger or threat to U.S. supercomputing dominance.

"Overall, the United States is still in the lead, and Japan is also a strong contender," Qian said. "The U.S., Japan and Europe have an advantage over us in supercomputing applications, so China cannot be blindly optimistic."

Qian also said some Chinese systems on the latest list are not strictly supercomputers, but only systems such as data centers, which usually are not accounted for in the U.S. and Japan.

"So, the numbers aren't everything," he said.

The United States is now ready to regain lost ground. Last July, U.S. President Barack Obama signed an executive order to announce the National Strategic Computing Initiative, which aims to build supercomputer about 10 times faster than the Sunway TaihuLight system.

The U.S. Department of Energy has already allocated 525 million dollars to build three supercomputers with performances greater than 100 petaflop/s, which are expected to come into service around 2018.

Japan also is trying to stage a comeback with a new supercomputer project called Flagship 2020.

"We could see lead changes on the Top500's top position in the next few years, so we should treat that calmly," Qian said.

In order to enhance China's competitiveness in high performance computing, Chen of the UCR advised China to further strengthen development of supercomputer software and applications and training of computing talents, which he said still lagged behind when compared with the U.S., Japan and Europe.

Qian echoed similar problems, including lack of some kernel technologies, relying on imported commercial software and shortage of talents. "China has made some progress," he said, "but the weakness is also obvious."

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2016-06/21/c_135452338.htm


Also, please keep in mind that while Taihu Light is an extraordinary supercomputer, it has its own limitations, largely because it is extremely customized to run the LinPack Benchmark.

It does significantly poorlyin HPCG benchmark, and surprisingly has a lower memory than even Tianhe 2.

Right

You expect the Chinese to rest with this little progress?

The Chinese are fully aware that they have hardly begun with their long march.

The Chinese have a saying: there is China and the rest of the world. :enjoy:
 
World’s Fastest Supercomputer Now Has Chinese Chip Technology

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...supercomputer-now-has-chinese-chip-technology

  • Previous leading machines depended on US-designed chips

  • More Chinese supercomputers in top 500 than US for first time

In a threat to U.S. technology dominance, the world’s fastest supercomputer is powered by Chinese-designed semiconductors for the first time. It’s a breakthrough for China’s attempts to reduce dependence on imported technology.

The Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer, located at the state-funded Chinese Supercomputing Center in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, is more than twice as powerful as the previous winner, according to TOP500, a research organization that compiles the rankings twice a year. The machine is powered by a SW26010 processor designed by Shanghai High Performance IC Design Center, TOP500 said Monday.

"It’s not based on an existing architecture. They built it themselves," said Jack Dongarra, a professor at the University of Tennessee and creator of the measurement method used by TOP500. "This is a system that has Chinese processors."

China’s determination to build its domestic chip industry and replace its dependence on imports that cost as much as oil. The world’s most populous country may also try to lessen its reliance on U.S. companies for defense technology and security infrastructure. Supercomputers aren’t major consumers of chips. But being at the heart of the world’s most powerful machines helps processor makers persuade the broader market to consider their technology.
"This is the first time that the Chinese have more systems than the U.S., so that, I think, is a striking accomplishment," said Dongarra. The Chinese had no machines in the 2001 list, he noted. In the latest, China has 167 entries compared with 165 for the U.S.

Previous supercomputer winners have had processors built on U.S. technology from Intel Corp. -- the world’s largest chipmaker -- International Business Machines Corp. or a derivative of Sun Microsystems designs.

The top position was previously occupied by Tianhe-2, built on Intel chips by China’s National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou. That system is now second, according to TOP500.

Sunway TaihuLight’s victory is a particular challenge to Intel’s dominance in computer servers, where it currently controls about 96 percent of the market. It announced a joint venture with a Chinese organization to domesticate some of its technology earlier this year.

Supercomputers are multiple server computers linked together in a way that allows them to process huge data sets and run the most complex calculations. While they’re hugely expensive and relatively rare, they showcase new technologies that often make their way into corporate data centers.

An Intel spokesman declined to comment on the new rankings.

Other chipmakers such as Qualcomm Inc. are working with Chinese organizations to build processors in the country. Technology provider ARM Holdings Plc, whose products are at the heart of most smartphones, is also trying to grab a slice of the Chinese market.

He he he... Not Intel Inside. :yahoo:
 
Right

You expect the Chinese to rest with this little progress?

The Chinese are fully aware that they have hardly begun with their long march.

The Chinese have a saying: there is China and the rest of the world. :enjoy:
We go step by step.
Thank for the help from Trumpish regime, we now go faster.
 
The peak power consumption under load (running the HPL benchmark) is at 15.37 MW, or 6 Gflops/Watt. This allows the TaihuLight system to grab one of the top spots on the Green500 in terms of the Performance/Power metric.

WOW!

What did I said before? The race of supercomputer is a two man game. Nobody can touch us except the US.


I even made a bet with one of your brothers that it wouldn't surpass 100 Pflops

https://defence.pk/threads/china-wi...supercomputer-next-month.430186/#post-8302824

https://defence.pk/threads/china-wi...omputer-next-month.430186/page-2#post-8304522

though I am surprised by how efficient this new supercomputer is -congrats to China on that- :cheers: I was sure it would be over 20 MW :whistle:
Change your avatar to mine, my friend.
 
The peak power consumption under load (running the HPL benchmark) is at 15.37 MW, or 6 Gflops/Watt. This allows the TaihuLight system to grab one of the top spots on the Green500 in terms of the Performance/Power metric.

WOW!

What did I said before? The race of supercomputer is a two man game. Nobody can touch us except the US.



Change your avatar to mine, my friend.
why would I do that buddy :whistle:
 
That's sustain performance, not peak. The peak is over 100PF.
the deal wasn't theoretical peak :what:

when people discuss how fast TaihuLight is do they use the peak number or Rmax number.


they'll mention 93 Petaflops not 125 Petaflops.
 
Congrats to china. Enjoy this for couple of years. India's 132 Exa flop super computer is coming up. More than 132 times faster than anything world will have at that time.

India’s proposed new supercomputer is set to work at 132 exaflops per second as against an 1 exaflops per second machine being built by Cray Incorporated, the iconic American computer company which has projected that its machine would be ready by 2020.

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/india-be...orological-applications.343923/#ixzz4CCiaHiWY
 
Congrats to china. Enjoy this for couple of years. India's 132 Pata flop super computer is coming up. More than 132 times faster than anything world will have at that time.

India’s proposed new supercomputer is set to work at 132 exaflops per second as against an 1 exaflops per second machine being built by Cray Incorporated, the iconic American computer company which has projected that its machine would be ready by 2020.

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/india-be...orological-applications.343923/#ixzz4CCiaHiWY


132 exafops by 2020...is this suppose to be a bad joke?
 
the deal wasn't theoretical peak :what:

when people discuss how fast TaihuLight is do they use the peak number or Rmax number.


they'll mention 93 Petaflops not 125 Petaflops.

Ha

I didn't lose the bet, we didnt establish te exact details of what we were betting on!

I didn't know shit about petaflops and bet on China surpassing 100 petaflops without saying sustained or peak performance. I think that we both lost so it wild be honourable to pay the fine.
 
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