HPE to Build Supercomputer with 100K AMD Zen 3 Cores

NSCC
(Image credit: NSCC)

Hewlett Packard Enterprise this week said it had landed an order to build a new supercomputer for the National Supercomputing Centre (NSCC) Singapore. The new system is powered by AMD's Epyc 'Milan' processors as well as Nvidia's A100 compute GPUs; it is eight times more powerful than its predecessor.  

NSCC's supercomputer uses HPE's liquid-cooled Cray EX architecture and will be one of the world's first systems based on AMD's 3rd Generation Epyc 'Milan' processors based on the Zen 3 microarchitecture (around 100,000 cores in total) as well as 352 of  Nvidia's A100 compute GPUs. 

The system will be comprised of about 900 nodes and is projected to provide an aggregate of up to 10 PFLOPS of raw FP64 compute power. The NSCC and HPE do not break down CPU and GPU performance in the system, though 352 Nvidia A100 GPUs can offer roughly 3.4 FP64 PFLOPS as well as a whopping 110 FP16 PFLOPS. Meanwhile, the system will be accompanied by a 10PB Cray ClusterStor E1000 storage system with over 300GB/s of read/write performance speeds.

The combination of AMD CPUs and Nvidia GPUs makes it possible to use the new supercomputer both for artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) as well as traditional high-performance computing (HPC).  

Initially, the NSCC will use its new HPC machine for biomedicine, genomics, diseases, engineering, and high-resolution weather modeling, but over time it can be used for a wide range of applications that require AI and/or HPC.  

The NSCC and HPE expect the new supercomputer to be operations sometimes in early 2022. The system costs SGD $40 million (around $30.16 million).

Anton Shilov
Freelance News Writer

Anton Shilov is a Freelance News Writer at Tom’s Hardware US. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

  • Gomez Addams
    We ordered a system with an EPYC CPU and an A100 yesterday. It won't arrive until June so reviews will have to wait. I'm really looking forward to it.
    Reply
  • ginthegit
    Eye roll. Having so many cores means that you still have to have a master core that organises all the others and it ends up with massive overheads. They need to change the Core ISA to work natively with multicore and move back to a similar system to the Cell in the PS3...
    I'd hate to think how much of a waste of money this is, and what useless tasks they are putting it through?!
    Reply