
Founded in 1998, High Performance Computing Virtual Laboratory (HPCVL) is Canada’s premier high-performance computing (HPC) center. With its main datacenter at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, HPCVL also maintains computing resources at six other Canadian universities and colleges. More than 800 researchers and students from across Canada rely on HPCVL to conduct innovative research in a variety of disciplines including science, engineering, medicine, and economics.
With the help of Sun Professional Services and third-party vendor Stantive Technologies Group, HPCVL built a symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) cluster and a chip multithreading (CMT) cluster to provide researchers with a choice of server architectures to better support varied application requirements. The SMP cluster delivers up to 16 TB of RAM, and the CMT cluster provides nearly 10,000 processing threads.
Every day, Canadian researchers rely on the High Performance Computing Virtual Laboratory (HPCVL) to help transform our lives by studying topics such as the flow of global capital, weather patterns, new drug therapies, and aircraft design. In 2008, HPCVL faced challenges surrounding system performance, user capacity, energy consumption, and datacenter costs. The laboratory’s main server cluster at Kingston was not delivering enough memory or throughput for some applications to run. Built on seven Sun Fire E25K symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) servers, the cluster delivered up to 4 TB of RAM and 1,000 processing threads. Researchers needed a lot more performance to stay competitive. A growing user base also meant that HPCVL needed to expand its capacity so that researchers would not have to wait weeks or months to run jobs. In addition, researchers lacked access to servers with chip multithreading (CMT) processors. Not only was CMT an emerging technology that the laboratory wanted to offer for educational purposes, but CMT servers also delivered throughput advantages for some types of applications. CMT servers also occupied less space and used less energy than SMP systems, which could help offset budget restrictions and safeguard the environment.