4 merge requests!368Update prace.md to document the change from qprace to qprod as the default...,!367Update prace.md to document the change from qprace to qprod as the default...,!366Update prace.md to document the change from qprace to qprod as the default...,!323extended-acls-storage-section
The Anselm cluster consists of 209 computational nodes named cn[1-209] of which 180 are regular compute nodes, 23 are GPU Kepler K20 accelerated nodes, 4 are MIC Xeon Phi 5110P accelerated nodes, and 2 are fat nodes. Each node is a powerful x86-64 computer, equipped with 16 cores (two eight-core Intel Sandy Bridge processors), at least 64 GB of RAM, and a local hard drive. User access to the Anselm cluster is provided by two login nodes login[1,2]. The nodes are interlinked through high speed InfiniBand and Ethernet networks. All nodes share a 320 TB /home disk for storage of user files. The 146 TB shared /scratch storage is available for scratch data.
The Fat nodes are equipped with a large amount (512 GB) of memory. Virtualization infrastructure provides resources to run longterm servers and services in virtual mode. Fat nodes and virtual servers may access 45 TB of dedicated block storage. Accelerated nodes, fat nodes, and virtualization infrastructure are available [upon request][a] from a PI.
The Fat nodes are equipped with a large amount (512 GB) of memory. Virtualization infrastructure provides resources to run long-term servers and services in virtual mode. Fat nodes and virtual servers may access 45 TB of dedicated block storage. Accelerated nodes, fat nodes, and virtualization infrastructure are available [upon request][a] from a PI.
Schematic representation of the Anselm cluster. Each box represents a node (computer) or storage capacity:
...
...
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ The parameters are summarized in the following tables: