IACS at Stony Brook Ookami
Resource Type
Compute
Latest Status
production
Description

Ookami is a computer technology testbed supported by the National Science Foundation under grant OAC 1927880. It provides researchers with access to the A64FX processor developed by Riken and Fujitsu for the Japanese path to exascale computing and is deployed in the, until June 2022, fastest computer in the world, Fugaku. It is the first such computer outside of Japan. By focusing on crucial architectural details, the ARM-based, multi-core, 512-bit SIMD-vector processor with ultrahigh-bandwidth memory promises to retain familiar and successful programming models while achieving very high performance for a wide range of applications. While being very power-efficient it supports a wide range of data types and enables both HPC and big data applications.

The Ookami HPE (formerly Cray) Apollo 80 system has 176 A64FX compute nodes each with 32GB of high-bandwidth memory and a 512 Gbyte SSD. This amounts to about 1.5M node hours per year. A high-performance Lustre filesystem provides about 0.8 Pbyte storage.

To facilitate users exploring current computer technologies and contrasting performance and programmability with the A64FX, Ookami also includes:

- 1 node with dual socket AMD Milan (64cores) with 512 Gbyte memory
- 2 nodes with dual socket Thunder X2 (64 cores) each with 256 Gbyte memory
- 1 node with dual socket Intel Skylake (32 cores) with 192 Gbyte memory and 2 NVIDIA V100 GPUs

Features
Is an ACCESS Allocated Production Compute resource
Unique, innovative or non-traditional compute resource
General compute use
Resource is allocated by ACCESS
Support for Science Gateways
NSF ACSS Category 2 Resources
Organization Name
Institute for Advanced Computational Science at Stony Brook University
Global Resource ID
ookami.sbu.access-ci.org