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Fugaku Tops Supercomputer Rankings Again as Arm HPC Ecosystem Expands

Arm technology-based Fugaku supercomputer, jointly developed by RIKEN and Fujitsu, was again awarded the number one spot on the Top500 list.
By Brent Gorda, Senior Director, HPC , Arm

By Brent Gorda, senior director of HPC, Arm

News Highlights:

  • Arm technology-based Fugaku supercomputer, jointly developed by RIKEN and Fujitsu, was again awarded the number one spot on the Top500 list
  • Achievement underscores the rapidly evolving demands of HPC that Arm technology uniquely addresses
  • The Arm HPC ecosystem continues to expand with key players announcing plans to leverage the next-generation Neoverse V1 platform and technologies, including SVE

Fugakuโ€”the Arm technology-based supercomputer jointly developed by RIKEN and Fujitsuโ€”was awarded the number one spot on the Top500 list for the second time in a row. This achievement further highlights the rapidly evolving demands of high-performance computingย (HPC) that Arm technology uniquely addresses through the unmatched combination of power efficiency, performance, and scalability.

In addition to the great work RIKEN and Fujitsu have done, weโ€™re seeing more adoption for Arm-based solutions across our ecosystem. ETRI, the national computing institute of the Republic of Korea, recently announced plans to adopt the upcoming Neoverse V1 (formerly code-named Zeus) CPU design, which feature Arm Scalable Vector Extensionsย (SVE), for its K-AB21 system. ETRI has set a goal of 16 teraflops per CPU and 1600 teraflops per rack for AB 21 (which stands for โ€˜Artificial Brain 21โ€™) while reducing power consumption by 60% compared to its target.

Meanwhile, Ampere Computing, Sandia National Laboratories, University of Bristol, and Amazon Web Services (AWS) provided details on their Arm-based HPC plans at the Arm High-Performance Computing User Group (AHUG) meeting earlier this month. At this monthโ€™s SC20 event, SiPearl, a company formed by the European Processor Initiative, also reiterated that it will adopt Neoverse V1 for its Rhea processor, which is part of SiPearlโ€™s exascale compute project. And, NVIDIA also announced researchers are achieving a nearly 26x performance boost for Arm in HPC with NVIDIA A100 GPUs and Arm Neoverse-based Ampere Altra CPUs.

While itโ€™s still early days for seeing the impact of many of these new Arm-based solutions, we are proud of the positive impact Fugaku has already had in COVID-19 related research efforts. Although formally launched only a few months ago, Fugaku has been deployed for five different COVID-19 research projects, including one examining how the virus circulates in the air, and another to determine the efficacy of more than 2,000 existing drugs.

Continuing to the push the boundaries of whatโ€™s possible

This burst of activity is the culmination of design initiatives that have been underway for years and are ultimately aimed at solving one of HPCโ€™s recurring challenges: how to build a system that can scale new heights of performance while remaining within reasonable power and budget envelopes. One of the central ideas behind the Arm processor architecture is that single-threaded, multicore processors will become the new norm for supercomputer CPUs as a way to increase performance without increasing relative power, and weโ€™re seeing greater adoption of this shared vision across our expanding HPC ecosystem.

The hardware advances, of course, parallel the burgeoning activity in the software community to expand the options for Arm in HPC. Whether itโ€™s the work weโ€™re doing with NVIDIA to bring CUDA support to Arm-based processors or contributing to the open-source efforts to drive standards for HPC software packages, we are working hard to ensure weโ€™re delivering the benefits of flexible, scalable, and efficient compute. SVE, meanwhile, continues to grow in importance as it enables processors that can accommodate vectors spanning 128 bits in length to 2048 bits (in 128-bit increments). Now, software developers can write once and have their work run on multiple processors. Likewise, processor developers and HPC users can take advantage of a wider spectrum of applications.

This year has been a watershed year for Arm in HPC. From our humble beginnings in server SoC design nearly a decade ago to being awarded the top supercomputer in the world (twice!), Armโ€™s journey has been significant, and we arenโ€™t planning to slow down any time soon. Across the globe weโ€™re seeing continued investment in the Arm ecosystem and increasing demand for more choice, more customization, and more innovation. Itโ€™s a challenge we are a ready to take on and we look forward to the next ten years of enabling our partners with technologies that are truly changing the world.

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