By
Stephen Shankland
Thursday, June 24 2004 11:07 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39184460,00.htm
update
Microsoft will sell a version of Windows for high-performance computing--a
niche in which rival Linux is blossoming--with a first version planned for the
second half of 2005.
As first reported by CNET News.com, the Windows
Server 2003 HPC Edition will include features for running windows on
clusters of machines interconnected by a high-speed network to form a single
computing resource, Microsoft said in a statement Wednesday.
In the statement, Microsoft said it has enlisted support for the new version
from several major companies, including IBM, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Advanced
Micro Devices and Intel. Other partners include Verari
Systems, one of whose specialties is cluster computing, and the Cornell
Theory Center, which has explored Windows for supercomputing for years.
Clusters
are hitting their stride as a mainstream element in supercomputing, but they're
not well-adapted for some tasks, such as decryption. On the newest list of the
top
500 supercomputers released this week, 291 were identified as clusters, the
list organizers said.
And Linux is popular on clusters, too. No. 2 system "Thunder,"
California Digital's 4,096-processor machine built for the Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, runs Linux, as do the two new Blue
Gene/L prototypes from IBM that are in the top 10 today.
Aiming for the mainstream
As the market expands to mainstream
users, Microsoft believes that it can get a foothold from technical experts with
the ability and interest in the nitty-gritty details of clusters, said Dennis
Oldroyd, director of the Windows Server Product Management Group.
"We see the market transitioning out of academic and government (areas) and
into the enterprise," Oldroyd said. "As that move happens, you'll find that
people need to have a familiar interface. They're not interested in tuning it
and tweaking it. They want to get their work done."
But Microsoft has been "hot and cold, hot and cold, hot and cold" about
high-performance computing and faces challenges in the market, said Nan Boden,
executive vice president and co-founder of Myricom,
which sells high-end networking gear widely used to build supercomputing
clusters.
"From what we've seen in performance of Windows, they just haven't been
competitive with Linux. There's too much overhead," Boden said. She said Myricom
has products to serve customers who want to run Windows on a high-performance
cluster. "But we really haven't seen a tremendous demand for it."
Microsoft knows what it's up against. "Certainly, the technology has grown up
around Linux, but we see demand from customers for Windows," Oldroyd said. "We
think we will have something unique to offer in the marketplace."
There will be room for Microsoft in the high-performance computing market,
even with a product scheduled to arrive more than a year from now, but the clock
is ticking, Summit Strategies analyst Dwight
Davis said. "Some people would argue it's too late, even if it came out
tomorrow. Linux has, in pretty short order, come to dominate this sector of the
computing spectrum," he said. "The longer it takes to get this to market, the
fewer the opportunities there will be."
Market researcher IDC expects the high-performance computing market to expand
from US$6.1 billion in 2004 to US$7.6 billion in 2008.
Ironically, Microsoft's popularity in the overall computing market helped
pave the way for Linux. Windows spread hand in hand with the same processors
from Intel that became the most widely used chip for running Linux. And in the
most recent Top500 list, 45 percent of machines used Intel's Xeon and 12 percent
used Intel's Itanium 2.
Intel will help Microsoft test the new Windows version and make sure that it
takes advantage of specific chip features, spokesman Scott McLaughlin said. "We
work with Microsoft to make sure their operating systems run best on Intel-based
platforms," he said.
Microsoft hopes that its new Windows version will make it easy to manage
clusters and to develop software for them. It also promises "a secure...platform
with high performance and low total cost of ownership."
Microsoft plans to release a preview version of its software in the fourth
quarter, Oldroyd said. He didn't comment on whether that would include a
software developer kit, but David Lifka, chief technology officer for the
Cornell Theory Center, said he expects one in coming months.
Standardizing cluster technology
Computers within a cluster use
software called Message Passing Interface, or MPI, to communicate. Microsoft
will provide a version of the interface.
According to Microsoft's job postings, it's also working on a version of MPI
to run on its .Net system, which would theoretically make it easier to move an
application that uses MPI from one computer to another. The .Net technology
employs the C# programming language and a package called the Common Language
Runtime to run programs.
Microsoft is examining MPI options, but Oldroyd declined to comment on
specific plans beyond the company's intent to make it easier to use the
technology by giving a consistent interface for higher-level software.
"One real advantage of...Windows HPC Edition is, it's one platform you need
to think about. You don't need to think about different MPIs, different
schedulers, compile with this, compile with that," Oldroyd said. "It makes the
market much more addressable for (independent software vendors). They've got a
platform they can count on being there."
Another idea Microsoft is evaluating is "cycle harvesting," a method to
harness the otherwise unused processing power of PCs, Oldroyd said. The idea has
been used on a large scale by the SETI@home
effort to sift through radio-telescope signals searching for
extraterrestrial communications.