The serial and parallel performance of one of the world's fastest general purpose computers, the CRAY-2, is analyzed using the standard Los Alamos Benchmark Set plus codes adapted for parallel processing. For comparison, architectural and performance data are also given for the CRAY X-MP/416. Factor
Performance comparison of the CRAY X-MP/24 with SDD and the CRAY-2
โ Scribed by Richard E. Anderson; Roger G. Grimes; Horst D. Simon
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 586 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0920-8542
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โฆ Synopsis
The CRAY-2 is considered to be one of the most powerful supercomputers. Its state-of-the-art technology features a faster clock and more memory than any other supercomputer available today. In this report the single processor performance of the CRAY-2 is compared with the older, more mature CRAY X-MP. Benchmark results are included for both the slow and the fast memory DRAM MOS CRAY-2. Our comparison is based on a kernel benchmark set aimed at evaluating the performance of these two machines on some standard tasks in scientific computing. Particular emphasis is placed on evaluating the impact of the availability of large real memory on the CRAY-2 versus fast secondary memory on the CRAY X-MP with SSD. Our benchmark includes large linear equation solvers and FFT routines, which test the capabilities of the different approaches to providing large memory. We find that in spite of its higher processor speed the CRAY-2 does not perform as well as the CRAY X-MP on the Fortran kernel benchmark. We also find that for large-scale applications, which have regular and predictable memory access patterns, a high-speed secondary memory device such as the SSD can provide performance equal to the large real memory of the CRAY-2. * The author is an employee of SCA Division of Boeing Computer Services.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this paper a set of techniques for improving the performance of the fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm on modern vector-oriented supercomputers is presented. Single-processor FFT implementations based on these techniques are developed for the CRAY-2 and the CRAY Y-MP, and it is shown that the
Various scientific codes were benchmarked on three vector computers: the CRAY X-MP/48 and CRAY-2 supercomputers and the SCS-40/XM minisupercomputer. On the X-MP, two Fortran compilers were also compared. The benchmarks, which were initially all in Fortran, consisted of six research codes from Caltec