PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computing System) is
IBM's answer to
DARPA's
High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) initiative. The program resulted in commercial development and deployment of the
Power 775
PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computing System) is IBM's answer to DARPA's High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) initiative. The program resulted in commercial development and deployment of the Power 775, a supercomputer design w ...
, a supercomputer design with extremely high performance ratios in fabric and memory bandwidth, as well as very high performance density and power efficiency.
IBM officially announced the Power 775 on July 12, 2011 and started to ship systems in August 2011.
Background
The HPCS program was a three phase research and development effort. IBM was one of three companies, along with
Cray
Cray Inc., a subsidiary of Hewlett Packard Enterprise, is an American supercomputer manufacturer headquartered in Seattle, Washington. It also manufactures systems for data storage and analytics. Several Cray supercomputer systems are listed ...
and
Sun Microsystems
Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Sun for short) was an American technology company that sold computers, computer components, software, and information technology services and created the Java programming language, the Solaris operating system, ZFS, the ...
, that received the HPCS grant for Phase II. In this phase, IBM collaborated with a consortium of 12 universities and the
Los Alamos National Lab to pursue an adaptable computing system with the goal of commercial viability of new chip technology, new computer architecture, operating systems, compiler and programming environments.
IBM was chosen for Phase III in November 2006, and granted $244 million in funds for continuing development of PERCS technology and delivering prototype systems by 2010.
Deployment
The first supercomputer using PERCS technology was intended to be the
Blue Waters system, however the high costs and complexity of the system resulted in its contract being canceled. The machine was subsequently delivered by Cray Inc, using a combination of GPUs and CPUs for processing, and a network with reduced global bandwidth capabilities.
Power775 / PERCS systems were subsequently deployed at roughly two dozen institutions in the U.S. and other countries, in installations ranging from 2,000 to over 64,000 Power7 processing cores. Major deployments have been for network-intensive and memory-intensive applications (as opposed to FLOPS-intensive), such as weather & climate modeling (
ECMWF
The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) is an independent intergovernmental organisation supported by most of the nations of Europe. It is based at three sites: Shinfield Park, Reading, United Kingdom; Bologna, Italy; an ...
,
UKMO,
Environment Canada
Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC; french: Environnement et Changement climatique Canada),Environment and Climate Change Canada is the applied title under the Federal Identity Program; the legal title is Department of the Environment ( ...
,
Japan Meteorological Agency), and scientific research (
University of Warsaw,
Slovak Academy of Sciences, and several other government laboratories in the U.S., and other countries).
Technology

PERCS will use IBM's large-scale technologies from servers and supercomputers like the
POWER7 microprocessor,
AIX operating system,
X10 programming language and
General Parallel File System.
Power 775
Sometimes known as the POWER7-IH or P7-IH, the
Power 775
PERCS (Productive, Easy-to-use, Reliable Computing System) is IBM's answer to DARPA's High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) initiative. The program resulted in commercial development and deployment of the Power 775, a supercomputer design w ...
is the commercial product that was developed by PERCS as a part of
IBM Power Systems line. The Power 775 was released by IBM in 2011 as a commercial product after IBM ended its participation in the
Blue Waters petaflops project at the University of Illinois, but marketed the 775 based on the growth of its high-performance computing business.
Unlike the IBM
Blue Gene series, which uses low-power processors to avoid
heat-density issues, the Power 775 was a
water-cooled rack-module system, and each module was 34 inches wide, 54 inches deep and 3.5 inches high (2U).
Each drawer comprises 8 cache coherent nodes (each of which can host single one or more O/S images) with a
MCM with four POWER7 CPUs each, and 16
DDR3 SDRAM
Double Data Rate 3 Synchronous Dynamic Random-Access Memory (DDR3 SDRAM) is a type of synchronous dynamic random-access memory (SDRAM) with a high bandwidth (" double data rate") interface, and has been in use since 2007. It is the higher-speed ...
slots per MCM for a total of 256 POWER7 cores and 2 TB RAM. Each drawer has 8 optical connect controller hub chips, connecting neighboring MCMs, PCIe peripherals and other compute nodes in a dragonfly network topology. One rack can house up to a dozen Power 775 drawers for a total performance of 96 TFLOPS.
The system supports up to 24 terabytes of memory and 230 terabytes of storage per rack. It is estimated to achieve over 94
teraflops
In computing, floating point operations per second (FLOPS, flops or flop/s) is a measure of computer performance, useful in fields of scientific computations that require floating-point calculations. For such cases, it is a more accurate meas ...
per rack.
Power 775 specifications
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See also
{{commons category, IBM PERCS
* High Productivity Computing Systems
* DARPA
* IBM Watson - built on a similar ( Power 750) air-cooled platform
References
External links
Power 775 product page
High Productivity Computing Systems (HPCS) – DARPA.mil
IBM supercomputer platforms
Parallel computing