Microsoft
Microsoft has unveiled the successor to Windows Computer Cluster Server 2003

Microsoft unveils Windows HPC Server 2008

Common set of tools for high performance computing

Written by Ian Williams

Microsoft has released the first public beta of Windows HPC Server 2008 designed for the high performance computing market.

The company has also announced the Parallel Computing Initiative to create a set of common development tools across multi-core desktops and clusters.

Windows HPC Server 2008 is the successor to Windows Computer Cluster Server 2003 and is based on Windows Server 2008.

Key features include high-speed networking, scalable cluster management tools, advanced failover capabilities, a service oriented architecture job scheduler, dual-boot and support for partners' clustered file systems.

"The new advances in Windows HPC Server 2008 allow customers to achieve the levels of scalability and performance of the most efficient clusters in the Top500 benchmark," said Kyril Faenov, general manager of HPC at Microsoft.

"This will make it dramatically more productive to deploy, utilise and integrate the advanced HPC clusters within their environment.

"By upgrading to Windows HPC Server 2008 on our 2,048-core production test cluster, we increased Linpack performance by 30 per cent and were able to deploy and validate the cluster in less than two hours using out of the box software."

The operating system also includes a common set of tools that span the desktop and cluster to help administrators, end-users and developers increase productivity.

Microsoft's Parallel Computing Initiative aims to simplify and enable parallelism for a broad set of commercial applications by adding to standards-based tools like MPI and OpenMP, and native parallel debugger support in Visual Studio 2007.

New technologies include Parallel Extensions to the .Net Framework that will enable developers to express parallelism and improve the efficiency and scalability of parallel applications.

Microsoft will ship customer technology previews of these services over the next six months.

The beta of Windows HPC Server 2008 is available for download. The final version is expected in the second half of 2008.

Tags:

Further reading

Intel promises friendlier HPC clusters

High-performance computing made easier   More...

SGI unveils purpose built HPC blades

Altix Ice cool   More...

Nvidia launches GPU developer toolkit

Cuda 1.0 helps unlock GPU parallel processing   More...

IBM dominates supercomputer Top 500

BlueGene/L System records 280.6 trillion calculations per second   More...

Related articles

IBM Roadrunner tops supercomputer list

Los Alamos cluster claims HPC crown   More...

Start-up shows off bus-less 64-core processor

Mesh architecture allows for massively scalable multi-core chips   More...

Mellanox unveils 40Gbps InfiniBand

Super-fast kit expected later in 2008   More...

Microsoft takes proprietary shortcut to SOA

But can a locked in SOA still be considered an SOA?   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

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

Watch

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

22 Jul 2008

3.22 MBSat-nav crashes, open source security and female gamers More...

21 Jul 2008

3.12 MBGlobal internet reach, online spending and the space race More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Security

Major DNS flaw revealed

Experts sound alarms over early disclosure   More...

Nintendo DS

Dodgy Chinese Nintendo chargers recalled

Experience could shock some users   More...

Advertisement

Houses of Parliament

Official 'spying' requests top 500,000

Information includes web records and itemised phone bills   More...

Hacking

Small firms naïve about security

SMBs remain prone to attack, says study   More...

Advertisement