bmw williams
linux

Williams F1 gives green light to Linux

HP Linux supercomputer aids aerodynamics modelling for team cars

Written by Peter Williams

The BMW Williams Formula 1 (F1) team has dramatically improved its high-resolution aerodynamic modelling of team cars by introducing an HP Linux supercomputer cluster.

The company, which currently lies second in this year's F1 Constructors' Championship, has added "several hundred" HP ProLiant Intel-based servers to its Oxfordshire headquarters.

Advertisement

Apart from driver skill, competitive advantage can be achieved through tyres, engine power, chassis and aerodynamics, with the latter the most difficult to control.

"Last year showed us that our chassis was a model of reliability but that there's still room for improvement, particularly on the aerodynamic front," said Patrick Head, technical director at Williams.

"[This] has given us the necessary technological leadership and expertise to design the revolutionary FW25 [this year's F1 car] rather than a modified version of last season's FW24."

A spokesman for Williams F1 added that the main driver behind the decision to expand the team's supercomputing resource was the need to reduce the time taken to perform a complete analysis for a given size of model.

The team then selected the technology that gave it the biggest reduction in total analysis time within its budget.

"We performed a number of benchmarking tests using typical models and selected the Linux cluster from the results of these tests," the spokesman told vnunet.com.

"The main benefit we have gained is indeed in time: we are now running a complete analysis on large models overnight, so that engineers can send a job to run in the evening and then have the results available in the following morning.

"This shortens our overall time to produce a design iteration, which means we can bring performance to our car more quickly."

Williams F1 is now studying the scalability of the Linux cluster and other solutions in order to understand how it can increase model sizes while continuing to get solutions to run overnight, "so that we can get more precision in our analysis without sacrificing any time", the spokesman said.

Tim Bush, engineering manager for HP EMEA, who was responsible for the installation on HP's side, added: "There was genuine surprise at the performance and its impact on the design cycle from the Williams F1 personnel."

Linux is popular for exploiting off-the-shelf applications that require heavy compute capability, while extra performance had come through using a very high-bandwidth, low-latency processor interconnection, explained Bush.

The result, according to Williams F1, has been a threefold enhancement of its simulation capabilities through more detailed computational fluid dynamics simulations.

This halved design, development and testing time has also provided more capacity to experiment with new car design concepts.

The multi-rack Intel-Xeon processor-based system, which is controlled through a head node HP Integrity (Itanium 64-bit) server, was delivered preconfigured in May.

HP is a major BMW Williams F1 team sponsor and technology partner, and the system is attached to a central HP storage area network which runs to many terabytes.

There are also two ruggedised race systems, one travelling with the team and the second with the test team, and crash and structural testing systems running on HP-UX (Unix). Get the latest news, views and technology updates in a weekly round up of the Penguin's unstoppable march by signing up to vnunet.com's FREE Linux newsletter here.

Tags:

Related articles

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Do you agree?

IT white papers

Search vnunet IThound

Top categories

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Watch

Shaun Nichols

19 Dec 2008

2.93 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Podcast image

18 Dec 2008

17.6 MBComputing podcast - the highlights of 2008 More...

Shaun Nichols and Iain Thomson

15 Dec 2008

4.98 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

Poll

Communications super-database

Communications super-database

Should the government be allowed to track our emails and internet use?

Previous poll results

Spotlight

CES logo

CES 2009 preview

vnunet.com looks at what is in store for delegates at...  More...

Lotus Notes

IBM unveils Lotus Notes 8.5

Collaboration suite beefs up Mac support and cuts email storage...  More...

Asus Eee Top

Review: Asus Eee Top ET1602 PC

A compact, touchscreen desktop PC best suited for basic computing...  More...

Moto W233 Renew

Motorola launches eco-friendly mobile phone

Moto W233 Renew handset is made out of recycled water...  More...

Primary Navigation