![]() Taiwania 3 | |
Introduced | 9 May 2018 |
---|---|
Cost | at least NT$430 million |
Type | supercomputer |
Memory | depends on system |
Connection | NVIDIA Mellanox Interconnection |
Speed | Taiwania 1:1.33 quadrillion FLOPS Taiwania 2:9 quadrillion FLOPS Taiwania 3:2.7 quadrillion FLOPS |
Taiwania ( traditional Chinese: 台灣杉; simplified Chinese: 台湾杉; pinyin: Táiwān Shān) is a supercomputer series in Taiwan owned by the National Applied Research Laboratories. [1]
The supercomputer was activated on 9 May 2018 after a two-year program to establish it with a cost of NT$430 million. [1]
In April 2023, it was unveiled that Taiwania 1 itself will be retired and replaced by Taiwania 4.
The Taiwania 1 Supercomputer has a memory of 3.4
petabytes with a maximum speed of 1.33 quadrillion
FLOPS.
[1] The hardware takes up a total area of 33 m2.
[2] Taiwania 2 has a maximum speed of 9 PFLOPS.
The Taiwania 2 supercomputer is a follow on to the Taiwania supercomputer designed by the National Center for High-Performance Computing. [3] Taiwania 2 debuted at 20 on the November 2018 TOP500 and 10 on the Green500. [4]
Taiwania 2 has a computing capacity of 9 quadrillion floating-point operations per second (9 PetaFLOPS, or 9 PFLOPS). Its hardware consists of 252 nodes, each of which contains two Intel Xeon Gold CPUs and eight NVIDIA V100 GPUs. [4] It runs the CentOS operating system. [5]
Taiwania 3 is one of the supercomputers made by Taiwan. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15][ excessive citations] and also the newest one (August, 2021). It is placed in the National Center for High-performance Computing [16] of NARLabs. There are 50,400 cores in total with 900 nodes, [17] [15] using Intel Xeon Platinum 8280 2.4 GHz CPU (28 Cores/ CPU) [15] [18] and using CentOS as Operating System. [19] It is an open access for public supercomputer. [20] [21] It is currently open access to scientists and more to do specific research after get permission from Taiwan's National Center for High-performance Computing. [17] [22] [23] [15] [24] This is the third supercomputer of the Taiwania series. It uses CentOS x86_64 7.8 as its system operator and Slurm Workload Manager as workflow manager to ensure better performance. Taiwania 3 uses InfiniBand HDR100 100 Gbit/s high speed Internet connection to ensure better performance of the supercomputer. The main memory capability is 192 GB. There's currently two Intel Xeon Platinum 8280 2.4 GHz CPU (28 Cores/ CPU) inside each node. The full calculation capability is 2.7PFLOPS. [25] It is launched into operation in November 2020 before schedule due to the needed for COVID-19. [10] [23] [26] It is currently ranked number 227 on Top 500 list of June, 2021 [19] and number 80 on Green 500 list. [27] It is manufactured by Quanta Computer, Taiwan Fixed Network, and ASUS Cloud. [19] [22] [28] [29] [30]
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![]() Taiwania 3 | |
Introduced | 9 May 2018 |
---|---|
Cost | at least NT$430 million |
Type | supercomputer |
Memory | depends on system |
Connection | NVIDIA Mellanox Interconnection |
Speed | Taiwania 1:1.33 quadrillion FLOPS Taiwania 2:9 quadrillion FLOPS Taiwania 3:2.7 quadrillion FLOPS |
Taiwania ( traditional Chinese: 台灣杉; simplified Chinese: 台湾杉; pinyin: Táiwān Shān) is a supercomputer series in Taiwan owned by the National Applied Research Laboratories. [1]
The supercomputer was activated on 9 May 2018 after a two-year program to establish it with a cost of NT$430 million. [1]
In April 2023, it was unveiled that Taiwania 1 itself will be retired and replaced by Taiwania 4.
The Taiwania 1 Supercomputer has a memory of 3.4
petabytes with a maximum speed of 1.33 quadrillion
FLOPS.
[1] The hardware takes up a total area of 33 m2.
[2] Taiwania 2 has a maximum speed of 9 PFLOPS.
The Taiwania 2 supercomputer is a follow on to the Taiwania supercomputer designed by the National Center for High-Performance Computing. [3] Taiwania 2 debuted at 20 on the November 2018 TOP500 and 10 on the Green500. [4]
Taiwania 2 has a computing capacity of 9 quadrillion floating-point operations per second (9 PetaFLOPS, or 9 PFLOPS). Its hardware consists of 252 nodes, each of which contains two Intel Xeon Gold CPUs and eight NVIDIA V100 GPUs. [4] It runs the CentOS operating system. [5]
Taiwania 3 is one of the supercomputers made by Taiwan. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15][ excessive citations] and also the newest one (August, 2021). It is placed in the National Center for High-performance Computing [16] of NARLabs. There are 50,400 cores in total with 900 nodes, [17] [15] using Intel Xeon Platinum 8280 2.4 GHz CPU (28 Cores/ CPU) [15] [18] and using CentOS as Operating System. [19] It is an open access for public supercomputer. [20] [21] It is currently open access to scientists and more to do specific research after get permission from Taiwan's National Center for High-performance Computing. [17] [22] [23] [15] [24] This is the third supercomputer of the Taiwania series. It uses CentOS x86_64 7.8 as its system operator and Slurm Workload Manager as workflow manager to ensure better performance. Taiwania 3 uses InfiniBand HDR100 100 Gbit/s high speed Internet connection to ensure better performance of the supercomputer. The main memory capability is 192 GB. There's currently two Intel Xeon Platinum 8280 2.4 GHz CPU (28 Cores/ CPU) inside each node. The full calculation capability is 2.7PFLOPS. [25] It is launched into operation in November 2020 before schedule due to the needed for COVID-19. [10] [23] [26] It is currently ranked number 227 on Top 500 list of June, 2021 [19] and number 80 on Green 500 list. [27] It is manufactured by Quanta Computer, Taiwan Fixed Network, and ASUS Cloud. [19] [22] [28] [29] [30]
{{
cite web}}
: |last=
has generic name (
help)