According to the latest Green 500 list released for November 2013, NVIDIA Tesla GPU's + Intel Xeon CPU's sweep the top 10 spots (!) on the Green 500 list for most power efficient, highest perf. per watt supercomputing systems in the world!
Of particular note is the top Green 500 system in Japan, which is nearly 25% more power efficient than any other system on the list! Also noteworthy is the Piz Daint system, which is far more power efficient than any other large scale high power system.
Note that ~ 90% of the computational power of these heterogeneous systems comes from the GPU's.
Green 500 Summary here: http://green500.org/news/green500-list-november-2013
Green 500 List here: http://green500.org/news/green500-list-november-2013?q=lists/green201311
Getting to Exascale computing will require a system that is ~ 10x more power efficient than the current number one Green 500 system, but we are well on our way there.
For anyone interested in seeing video sessions from the SC13 supercomputing conference, see video links here: http://www.nvidia.com/object/sc13-technology-theater.html . Highly recommended from what I have seen so far!
Of particular note is the top Green 500 system in Japan, which is nearly 25% more power efficient than any other system on the list! Also noteworthy is the Piz Daint system, which is far more power efficient than any other large scale high power system.
Note that ~ 90% of the computational power of these heterogeneous systems comes from the GPU's.
Green 500 Summary here: http://green500.org/news/green500-list-november-2013
Green 500 List here: http://green500.org/news/green500-list-november-2013?q=lists/green201311
Green500.org said:The November 2013 release of the Green500 list was announced today at the SC|13 conference in Denver, Colorado, USA. Continuing the trend from previous years, heterogeneous supercomputing systems totally dominates the top 10 spots of the Green500. A heterogeneous system uses computational building blocks that consist of two or more types of computing brains. These types of computing brains include traditional processors (CPUs), graphics processing units (GPUs), and co-processors. In this edition of the Green500, one system smashes through the 4-billion floating-point operation per second (gigaflops) per watt barrier.
TSUBAME-KFC, a heterogeneous supercomputing system developed at the Tokyo Institute of Technology (TITech) in Japan, tops the list with an efficiency of 4.5 gigaflops/watt. Each computational node within TSUBAME-KFC consists of two Intel Ivy Bridge processors and four NVIDIA Kepler GPUs. In fact, all systems in the top ten of the Green500 use a similar architecture, i.e., Intel CPUs combined with NVIDIA GPUs. Wilkes, a supercomputer housed at Cambridge University, takes the second spot. The third position is filled by the HA-PACS TCA system at the University of Tsukuba. Of particular note, this list also sees two petaflop systems, each capable of computing over one quadrillion operations per second, achieve an efficiency of over 3 gigaflops/watt, namely Piz Daint at Swiss National Supercomputing Center and TSUBAME 2.5 at Tokyo Institute of Technology. Thus, Piz Daint is the greenest petaflop supercomputer on the Green500. As a point of reference, Tianhe-2, the fastest supercomputer in the world according to the Top500 list, achieves an efficiency of 1.9 gigaflops/watt.
This list marks a number of firsts for the Green500. It is the first time that a supercomputer has broken through the 4 gigaflops/watt barrier. Second, it is first time that all of the top 10 systems on the Green500 are heterogeneous systems. Third, it is the first time that the average of the measured power consumed by the systems on the Green500 dropped with respect to the previous edition of the list. A decrease in the average measured power coupled with an overall increase in performance is an encouraging step along the trail to exascale, noted Wu Feng of the Green500. Fourth, assuming that TSUBAME-KFCs energy efficiency can be maintained for an exaflop system, it is the first time that an extrapolation to an exaflop supercomputer has dropped below 300 megawatts (MW), specifically 222 MW. This 222-MW power envelope is still a long way away from DARPAs target of an exaflop system in the 20-MW power envelope, says Feng.
Starting with this release, the Little Green500 list only includes machines with power values submitted directly to the Green500. In fact, there are more than 400 systems that have submitted directly to the Green500 over the past few years. As in previous years, the Little Green500 list has better overall efficiency than the Green500 list on average.
Earlier this year, the Green500 adopted new methodologies for measuring the power of supercomputing systems and providing a more accurate representation of the energy efficiency of large-scale systems. In June 2013, the Green500 formally adopted measurement rules (a.k.a. Level 1 measurements), developed in cooperation with the Energy-Efficient High-Performance Computing Working Group (EE HPC WG). Moreover, power-measurement methodologies with higher precision and accuracy were developed as a part of this effort (a.k.a. Level 2 and Level 3 measurements). With growing support and interest in the energy efficiency of large-scale computing systems, the Green500 is welcoming two more submissions at Level 2 and Level 3 than in the previous edition of the Green500 list. Of particular note, Piz Daint, the greenest petaflop supercomputer in the world, submitted the highest-quality Level 3 measurement.
Getting to Exascale computing will require a system that is ~ 10x more power efficient than the current number one Green 500 system, but we are well on our way there.
For anyone interested in seeing video sessions from the SC13 supercomputing conference, see video links here: http://www.nvidia.com/object/sc13-technology-theater.html . Highly recommended from what I have seen so far!
