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Supercomputing in Pakistan

The high performance supercomputing program started in mid-to-late 1980s in Pakistan.[1] Supercomputing is a recent area of Computer science in which Pakistan has made progress, driven in part by the growth of the information technology age in the country. Developing on the ingenious supercomputer program started in 1980s when the deployment of the Cray supercomputers was initially denied.[2]

The high-performance computing cluster, PowerEdge R715, at Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute

The fastest supercomputer currently in use in Pakistan is developed and hosted by the National University of Sciences and Technology at its modeling and simulation research centre. As of November 2012, there are no supercomputers from Pakistan on the Top500 list.[3]

Background edit

But what about supercomputer exports to India or Pakistan? Will they be used to advance the nations' economies or to speed development of nuclear weapons?

— A passage in Fundamentals of International Business, p. 78 discussing U.S. technological export policy.[4]

The initial interests of Pakistan in the research and development of supercomputing began during the early 1980s, at several high-powered institutions of the country. During this time, senior scientists at the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) were the first to engage in research on high performance computing, while calculating and determining exact values involving fast-neutron calculations.[5]

According to one scientist involved in the development of the supercomputer, a team of the leading scientists at PAEC developed powerful computerized electronic codes, acquired powerful high performance computers to design this system and came up with the first design that was to be manufactured, as part of the atomic bomb project.[5] However, the most productive and pioneering research was carried out by physicist M.S. Zubairy at the Institute of Physics of Quaid-e-Azam University.[6] Zubairy published two important books on Quantum Computers and high-performance computing throughout his career that are presently taught worldwide.[7] In 1980s and 1990s, the scientific research and mathematical work on the supercomputers was also carried out by mathematician Dr. Tasneem Shah at the Kahuta Research Laboratories while trying to solve additive problems in Computational mathematics and the Statistical physics using the Monte Carlo method.[citation needed] In 1990s, the Khan Research Laboratories deployed a series of supercomputer systems at its site, becoming nation's one of the first fastest computers at that time.[8] Technological imports in supercomputers were denied to Pakistan, as well as India, due to an arms embargo, as the foreign powers feared that the imports and enhancement to the supercomputing development was a dual use of technology and could be used for developing nuclear weapons in 1990s.

During the Bush administration, in an effort to help US-based companies gain competitive ground in developing information technology-based markets, the U.S. government eased regulations that applied to exporting high-performance computers to Pakistan and four other technologically developing countries. The new regulations allowed these countries to import supercomputer systems that were capable of processing information at a speed of 190,000 million theoretical operations per second (MTOPS); the previous limit had been 85,000 MTOPS.[4]

List of organizations Supercomputers in Pakistan edit

TOP500 Rank Site Name Manufacturer Architecture Year Established Rmax
(TFlop/s)
Rpeak
(TFlop/s)
- National University of Sciences & Technology (NUST), Islamabad - HPE Cluster (CPU + GPU) 2012 - 132
- Pak-Austria Fachhochschule Institute of Applied Sciences and Technology, Haripur - Lenovo Cluster (CPU + GPU) 2021 - 97
- Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences (PIEAS), Islamabad Dunamis - Cluster (CPU + GPU) 2020 - 50.8
- NED University of Engineering and Technology (NEDUET), Karachi - - Cluster - - 10
- Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Lahore - Huawei Cluster (CPU + GPU) 2018 - ~10
- Riphah International University (Riphah), Islamabad - IBM Cluster 2016 - 3.2
- Kohat University of Science and Technology (KUST), Kohat - - Cluster (CPU) 2008 - 0.416
- Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences (PIEAS), Islamabad - SGI MPP (CPU) 2011 - 0.384
- Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology (GIKI), Swabi - Dell Cluster (CPU + GPU) 2012 - 0.158
- COMSATS University Islamabad (CUI), Islamabad - - Cluster (CPU) 2012 - 0.158
- University of Malakand (UoM), Chakdara [1] - - Cluster 2016 - N/A
- Khan Research Laboratories, Kahuta - IBM Cluster (CPU + GPU) 1990 - N/A (Classified)

Supercomputing programs edit

University of Malakand edit

Developed Supercomputer in CCMS Department of Physics, University of Malakand. It is heavily used by Graduate Students, PhD Scholars and Faculty Members of UOM as well as Researchers from other organizations. It is operational since 2016 and its performance and configuration can be monitored from the link:

http://hpc.uom.edu.pk

It has 2-servers used as Head Nodes and 24-machines used as Compute Nodes. It has been mostly used for Simulation and Modeling by the Researchers of Materials Science and Chemistry Departments.

GIK Institute edit

The Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology (GIKI) has nation's notable supercomputer programmes.

This facility has been funded by Directorate of Science and Technology (DoST), Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan in 2012 under supervision of Dr. Masroor Hussain.[9] This system provides a test bed for shared memory systems, distributed memory systems and Array Processing using OpenMP, MPI-2 and CUDA specifications, respectively. It is a compute-intensive platform and consisted of the following hardware components:[10]

  • Front Node: Dell R815 with 64 CPU cores, 256GB RAM, 1.8TB Secondary Memory
  • 3 Compute Nodes: Dell R715 each with 32 CPU cores per compute node (96 in total), 128GB RAM per compute node (384GB in total), 600GB Secondary Memory/ compute node (1.8TB in total)
  • NVIDIA Tesla M2090 Graphical Processing Unit (GPU) with 1024 GPU cores: This facility may be used for an emerging paradigm of parallel computing which uses GPUs as computing units, which connected to Front Node
  • Dell Power Connect 8024F layer-3 manageable switch: Front Node and the Compute Nodes are connected to each other using this switch. It provides an enormous data transfer rate of 10Gbit/s among the connected entities using fibre channels
  • Software: To make the hardware layer parallel-computation-capable, Rocks Cluster 6.1 (Emerald Boa) over CentOS has been installed and configured along with CUDA roll

COMSATS edit

The COMSATS Institute of Information Technology (CIIT) has been actively involved in research in the areas of parallel computing and computer cluster systems.[11] In 2004, CIIT built a cluster-based supercomputer for research purposes. The project was funded by the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan.[11] The Linux-based computing cluster, which was tested and configured for optimization, achieved a performance of 158 GFLOPS. The packaging of the cluster was locally designed.[11]

NUST edit

The National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST) in Islamabad has developed the fastest supercomputing facility in Pakistan till date. The supercomputer, which operates at the university's Research Centre for Modeling and Simulation (RCMS), was inaugurated in September 2012.[12] The supercomputer has parallel computation abilities and has a performance of 132 teraflops per second (i.e. 132 trillion floating-point operations per second), making it the fastest graphics processing unit (GPU) parallel computing system currently in operation in Pakistan.[12]

It has multi-core processors and graphics co-processors, with an inter-process communication speed of 40 gigabits per second. According to specifications available of the system, the cluster consists of a "66 NODE supercomputer with 30,992 processor cores, 2 head nodes (16 processor cores), 32 dual quad core computer nodes (256 processor cores) and 32 Nvidia computing processors. Each processor has 960 processor cores (30,720 processor cores), QDR InfiniBand interconnection and 21.6 TB SAN storage."[12]

KRL edit

In 1990s, the Kahuta Research Laboratories (KRL) became nation's first site and a home of a number of the most high-performance supercomputer and parallel computing systems that were installed at the facility by a team of mathematicians.[2] A parallel Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) division was established which specialized in conducting high performance computations on shock waves in the blast effects from the outer surface to the inner core by using the difficult differential equations of the state of the materials under high pressure.[2]

KUST edit

The Kohat University of Science and Technology installed a supercomputer facility with the specifications of Cluster.[13]

Attribute Value
Cluster Name KUST-Kohat
Number of CPUs 104
CPU Type EM64T
CPU Clock 2.00 GHz
Peak Performance 416 GFLOPS
Organization Kohat University
Location Kohat, N-W.F.P, Pakistan.
Last Updated 2008-01-21

Riphah International University edit

On 22 January 2016, Riphah International University based in Islamabad announced that their team of engineers have developed a supercomputer architecture. The system supports CUDA, MPI/LAM, OpenMP, OpenCL and OpenACC programming models. It also can solve larger algorithms, numerical techniques, big data, data mining, bioinformatics and genomics, business intelligence and analytics, climate, and weather and ocean related problems.[14]

UCERD Private Limited edit

UCERD Private Limited proposed and developed Pakistan's 1st FPGA-Powered Supercomputer.[15][16]

In 2019, the UCERD team has won HEC Technology Development Fund of Rs. 16 Million[17] for the Project "Development of Scalable Heterogeneous Supercomputing System"[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Prasad, Nitin (2016). Comporary Pakistan: Political System, Military and Changing Scenario. New Delhi, India: VIJ Books India, Pvt Ltd. pp. 200 (Chapt. Science in Pakistan). ISBN 978-93-85505-27-0.
  2. ^ a b c From the memoirs of Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan (8 September 2014). "Part-X". News International, Part X. News International. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  3. ^ "Top500 November 2012". Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  4. ^ a b Fundamentals of International Business. Wessex Publishing. 2008. p. 78. ISBN 978-0979734427.
  5. ^ a b Khan, Feroz Hassan (2012). Eating grass the making of the Pakistan atomic bomb. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804784801.
  6. ^ Rizvi, Aftab A.; Shakil-Ur-Rehman; Zubairy, M.S. (1988). "Binary Logic by Grating Structure". Journal of Modern Optics. 35 (10): 1591–1594. Bibcode:1988JMOp...35.1591R. doi:10.1080/09500348814551701.
  7. ^ "M. Suhail Zubairy". Department of Physics and Astronomy. Texas A&M University (TAME). Retrieved 8 October 2012.
  8. ^ From the Memoirs of Dr. A.Q. Khan (22 September 2014). "Part XII". News International, Part XII. News International. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  9. ^ Hussain, Masroor Hussain. "Faculty Profile of Dr. Masroor Hussain".
  10. ^ Webteam, GIKI. "GIKI IT Facilities". The GIKI Webteam. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
  11. ^ a b c Ishaq, A Faiz M; Khan, Majid Iqbal. "Supercomputing: A Roadmap for the OIC Member States" (PDF). COMSATS Institute of Information Technology (Islamabad). Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  12. ^ a b c "Fastest supercomputer is out". Daily Times (Pakistan). 19 September 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  13. ^ "KUST-Kohat Cluster". rocksclusters.org. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  14. ^ "Riphah team develops supercomputer architecture". The Nation. 22 January 2016. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  15. ^ "Pakistan's 1st FPGA-Powered Supercomputer System Developed by UCERD Private Limited". UCERD.Com. 18 January 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  16. ^ Akram, Wasim; Hussain, Tassadaq; Ayguade, Eduard. FPGA and ARM Processor based Supercomputing. 2018 International Conference on Computing, Mathematics and Engineering Technologies – iCoMET 2018. Islamabad: IEEE Xplorer. doi:10.1109/ICOMET.2018.8346363. ISBN 978-1-5386-1370-2.
  17. ^ "HEC TDF 3rd Call Results". HEC.gov.pk. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  18. ^ "Development Of A Scalable Heterogeneous Supercomputer". UCERD.Com. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2019.

External links edit

  • Supercomputing Research and Education Facility, NUST
  • Zubairy, M.S. (26–30 March 2007). "Quantum Computers" (PDF). National Center for Physics. p. 72. Retrieved 19 January 2013.

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The high performance supercomputing program started in mid to late 1980s in Pakistan 1 Supercomputing is a recent area of Computer science in which Pakistan has made progress driven in part by the growth of the information technology age in the country Developing on the ingenious supercomputer program started in 1980s when the deployment of the Cray supercomputers was initially denied 2 The high performance computing cluster PowerEdge R715 at Ghulam Ishaq Khan InstituteThe fastest supercomputer currently in use in Pakistan is developed and hosted by the National University of Sciences and Technology at its modeling and simulation research centre As of November 2012 there are no supercomputers from Pakistan on the Top500 list 3 Contents 1 Background 2 List of organizations Supercomputers in Pakistan 3 Supercomputing programs 3 1 University of Malakand 3 2 GIK Institute 3 3 COMSATS 3 4 NUST 3 5 KRL 3 6 KUST 3 7 Riphah International University 3 8 UCERD Private Limited 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground editBut what about supercomputer exports to India or Pakistan Will they be used to advance the nations economies or to speed development of nuclear weapons A passage in Fundamentals of International Business p 78 discussing U S technological export policy 4 The initial interests of Pakistan in the research and development of supercomputing began during the early 1980s at several high powered institutions of the country During this time senior scientists at the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission PAEC were the first to engage in research on high performance computing while calculating and determining exact values involving fast neutron calculations 5 According to one scientist involved in the development of the supercomputer a team of the leading scientists at PAEC developed powerful computerized electronic codes acquired powerful high performance computers to design this system and came up with the first design that was to be manufactured as part of the atomic bomb project 5 However the most productive and pioneering research was carried out by physicist M S Zubairy at the Institute of Physics of Quaid e Azam University 6 Zubairy published two important books on Quantum Computers and high performance computing throughout his career that are presently taught worldwide 7 In 1980s and 1990s the scientific research and mathematical work on the supercomputers was also carried out by mathematician Dr Tasneem Shah at the Kahuta Research Laboratories while trying to solve additive problems in Computational mathematics and the Statistical physics using the Monte Carlo method citation needed In 1990s the Khan Research Laboratories deployed a series of supercomputer systems at its site becoming nation s one of the first fastest computers at that time 8 Technological imports in supercomputers were denied to Pakistan as well as India due to an arms embargo as the foreign powers feared that the imports and enhancement to the supercomputing development was a dual use of technology and could be used for developing nuclear weapons in 1990s During the Bush administration in an effort to help US based companies gain competitive ground in developing information technology based markets the U S government eased regulations that applied to exporting high performance computers to Pakistan and four other technologically developing countries The new regulations allowed these countries to import supercomputer systems that were capable of processing information at a speed of 190 000 million theoretical operations per second MTOPS the previous limit had been 85 000 MTOPS 4 List of organizations Supercomputers in Pakistan editTOP500 Rank Site Name Manufacturer Architecture Year Established Rmax TFlop s Rpeak TFlop s National University of Sciences amp Technology NUST Islamabad HPE Cluster CPU GPU 2012 132 Pak Austria Fachhochschule Institute of Applied Sciences and Technology Haripur Lenovo Cluster CPU GPU 2021 97 Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences PIEAS Islamabad Dunamis Cluster CPU GPU 2020 50 8 NED University of Engineering and Technology NEDUET Karachi Cluster 10 Lahore University of Management Sciences LUMS Lahore Huawei Cluster CPU GPU 2018 10 Riphah International University Riphah Islamabad IBM Cluster 2016 3 2 Kohat University of Science and Technology KUST Kohat Cluster CPU 2008 0 416 Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences PIEAS Islamabad SGI MPP CPU 2011 0 384 Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology GIKI Swabi Dell Cluster CPU GPU 2012 0 158 COMSATS University Islamabad CUI Islamabad Cluster CPU 2012 0 158 University of Malakand UoM Chakdara 1 Cluster 2016 N A Khan Research Laboratories Kahuta IBM Cluster CPU GPU 1990 N A Classified Supercomputing programs editUniversity of Malakand edit Main article University of Malakand Developed Supercomputer in CCMS Department of Physics University of Malakand It is heavily used by Graduate Students PhD Scholars and Faculty Members of UOM as well as Researchers from other organizations It is operational since 2016 and its performance and configuration can be monitored from the link http hpc uom edu pkIt has 2 servers used as Head Nodes and 24 machines used as Compute Nodes It has been mostly used for Simulation and Modeling by the Researchers of Materials Science and Chemistry Departments GIK Institute edit Main article Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology The Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology GIKI has nation s notable supercomputer programmes This facility has been funded by Directorate of Science and Technology DoST Government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan in 2012 under supervision of Dr Masroor Hussain 9 This system provides a test bed for shared memory systems distributed memory systems and Array Processing using OpenMP MPI 2 and CUDA specifications respectively It is a compute intensive platform and consisted of the following hardware components 10 Front Node Dell R815 with 64 CPU cores 256GB RAM 1 8TB Secondary Memory 3 Compute Nodes Dell R715 each with 32 CPU cores per compute node 96 in total 128GB RAM per compute node 384GB in total 600GB Secondary Memory compute node 1 8TB in total NVIDIA Tesla M2090 Graphical Processing Unit GPU with 1024 GPU cores This facility may be used for an emerging paradigm of parallel computing which uses GPUs as computing units which connected to Front Node Dell Power Connect 8024F layer 3 manageable switch Front Node and the Compute Nodes are connected to each other using this switch It provides an enormous data transfer rate of 10Gbit s among the connected entities using fibre channels Software To make the hardware layer parallel computation capable Rocks Cluster 6 1 Emerald Boa over CentOS has been installed and configured along with CUDA rollCOMSATS edit Main article COMSATS Institute of Information Technology The COMSATS Institute of Information Technology CIIT has been actively involved in research in the areas of parallel computing and computer cluster systems 11 In 2004 CIIT built a cluster based supercomputer for research purposes The project was funded by the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan 11 The Linux based computing cluster which was tested and configured for optimization achieved a performance of 158 GFLOPS The packaging of the cluster was locally designed 11 NUST edit Main articles ScREC supercomputer and National University of Sciences and Technology Pakistan The National University of Sciences and Technology NUST in Islamabad has developed the fastest supercomputing facility in Pakistan till date The supercomputer which operates at the university s Research Centre for Modeling and Simulation RCMS was inaugurated in September 2012 12 The supercomputer has parallel computation abilities and has a performance of 132 teraflops per second i e 132 trillion floating point operations per second making it the fastest graphics processing unit GPU parallel computing system currently in operation in Pakistan 12 It has multi core processors and graphics co processors with an inter process communication speed of 40 gigabits per second According to specifications available of the system the cluster consists of a 66 NODE supercomputer with 30 992 processor cores 2 head nodes 16 processor cores 32 dual quad core computer nodes 256 processor cores and 32 Nvidia computing processors Each processor has 960 processor cores 30 720 processor cores QDR InfiniBand interconnection and 21 6 TB SAN storage 12 KRL edit Main article Kahuta Research Laboratories In 1990s the Kahuta Research Laboratories KRL became nation s first site and a home of a number of the most high performance supercomputer and parallel computing systems that were installed at the facility by a team of mathematicians 2 A parallel Computational Fluid Dynamics CFD division was established which specialized in conducting high performance computations on shock waves in the blast effects from the outer surface to the inner core by using the difficult differential equations of the state of the materials under high pressure 2 KUST edit The Kohat University of Science and Technology installed a supercomputer facility with the specifications of Cluster 13 Attribute ValueCluster Name KUST KohatNumber of CPUs 104CPU Type EM64TCPU Clock 2 00 GHzPeak Performance 416 GFLOPSOrganization Kohat UniversityLocation Kohat N W F P Pakistan Last Updated 2008 01 21Riphah International University edit On 22 January 2016 Riphah International University based in Islamabad announced that their team of engineers have developed a supercomputer architecture The system supports CUDA MPI LAM OpenMP OpenCL and OpenACC programming models It also can solve larger algorithms numerical techniques big data data mining bioinformatics and genomics business intelligence and analytics climate and weather and ocean related problems 14 UCERD Private Limited edit UCERD Private Limited proposed and developed Pakistan s 1st FPGA Powered Supercomputer 15 16 In 2019 the UCERD team has won HEC Technology Development Fund of Rs 16 Million 17 for the Project Development of Scalable Heterogeneous Supercomputing System 18 See also edit nbsp Pakistan portalSupercomputing in China Supercomputing in Europe Supercomputing in India Supercomputing in JapanReferences edit Prasad Nitin 2016 Comporary Pakistan Political System Military and Changing Scenario New Delhi India VIJ Books India Pvt Ltd pp 200 Chapt Science in Pakistan ISBN 978 93 85505 27 0 a b c From the memoirs of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan 8 September 2014 Part X News International Part X News International Retrieved 24 October 2014 Top500 November 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2013 a b Fundamentals of International Business Wessex Publishing 2008 p 78 ISBN 978 0979734427 a b Khan Feroz Hassan 2012 Eating grass the making of the Pakistan atomic bomb Palo Alto Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804784801 Rizvi Aftab A Shakil Ur Rehman Zubairy M S 1988 Binary Logic by Grating Structure Journal of Modern Optics 35 10 1591 1594 Bibcode 1988JMOp 35 1591R doi 10 1080 09500348814551701 M Suhail Zubairy Department of Physics and Astronomy Texas A amp M University TAME Retrieved 8 October 2012 From the Memoirs of Dr A Q Khan 22 September 2014 Part XII News International Part XII News International Retrieved 24 October 2014 Hussain Masroor Hussain Faculty Profile of Dr Masroor Hussain Webteam GIKI GIKI IT Facilities The GIKI Webteam Retrieved 9 February 2013 a b c Ishaq A Faiz M Khan Majid Iqbal Supercomputing A Roadmap for the OIC Member States PDF COMSATS Institute of Information Technology Islamabad Retrieved 7 October 2012 a b c Fastest supercomputer is out Daily Times Pakistan 19 September 2012 Retrieved 7 October 2012 KUST Kohat Cluster rocksclusters org Retrieved 29 March 2016 Riphah team develops supercomputer architecture The Nation 22 January 2016 Retrieved 29 March 2016 Pakistan s 1st FPGA Powered Supercomputer System Developed by UCERD Private Limited UCERD Com 18 January 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2018 Akram Wasim Hussain Tassadaq Ayguade Eduard FPGA and ARM Processor based Supercomputing 2018 International Conference on Computing Mathematics and Engineering Technologies iCoMET 2018 Islamabad IEEE Xplorer doi 10 1109 ICOMET 2018 8346363 ISBN 978 1 5386 1370 2 HEC TDF 3rd Call Results HEC gov pk 15 May 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Development Of A Scalable Heterogeneous Supercomputer UCERD Com 15 May 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2019 External links editSupercomputing Research and Education Facility NUST Zubairy M S 26 30 March 2007 Quantum Computers PDF National Center for Physics p 72 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Supercomputing in Pakistan amp oldid 1200716234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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