Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Bright Computing, a leader in cluster management software, today
announced that the company has entered into an OEM agreement with Cray
Inc. (NASDAQ: CRAY). This agreement enables Cray to include Bright
Cluster Manager® as an integral feature of its
high-performance external solutions for large HPC installations. Bright
Cluster Manager provides a centralized monitoring and management
solution for power management, image management, trouble-shooting,
system provisioning, workload management and system health monitoring.
Cray will leverage Bright Cluster Manager’s flexibilities to offer its
customers a combination of these services and additional services, such
as automated Lustre server failover.
This solution has already been deployed on large HPC
installations, including the external services piece of the Cray XE6
supercomputer at the United States Department of Energy's National
Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC). Cray plans to
deploy Bright Cluster Manager on new Cray systems that will be equipped
with large external services solutions, and will soon begin upgrading a
number of existing large installations around the world.
“Bright Cluster Manager is a major differentiator and enabler for
Cray’s external solutions,” said Chuck Morreale, vice president of
Cray’s custom engineering group. “Bright provides easy-to-use, yet
powerful provisioning, monitoring, and management capabilities for our
external servers, and provides the flexibility to deploy additional
automated management services to meet the specific needs of each
customer. We are now able to log important data that was not previously
captured – allowing performance analysts and remote support engineers to
make more informed decisions.”
Data storage is an important external HPC solution for Cray and
the company has developed systems that manage incredibly complex
data-management tasks – addressing a key opportunity in HPC. According
to IDC, the market for storage in HPC is growing faster than the demand
for HPC servers, reaching $4.9 billion in 2014, or nearly 40% of the
investment in HPC servers. The driver behind this growth is the data
explosion in HPC, data intensive computing, and the proliferation of
iterative methods and problems being studied at larger scales. (Source:
IDC Predictions 2011: Worldwide High-Performance Computing webcast, 16
February 2011)
“Cray’s decision to choose Bright Cluster Manager for their
external solutions is a strong endorsement of the versatility of and
reliability of our cluster management capabilities,” said Dr. Matthijs
van Leeuwen, Founder and CEO of Bright Computing. “This use of Bright in
important HPC installations for storage servers, login servers, data
movers, pre-and post-processing servers is validation of both Cray and
Bright’s ability to meet the increasingly complex requirements of HPC
users.”
Bright Computing is a specialist in cluster management software
and services for high-performance computing (HPC). Its flagship product
— Bright
Cluster Manager— with its intuitive graphical user
interface and powerful cluster management shell, makes clusters of any
size easy to install, use and manage, including systems combining
Intel/AMD processors with GPGPU technology. Bright's minimal footprint
enables HPC systems to be utilized to their maximum potential, from
departmental clusters to large-scale systems. Bright Cluster Manager is
the management solution of choice for many research institutes,
universities, and companies across the world, including several TOP500
installations. Bright Cluster Manager is certified as Intel®
Cluster Ready. Bright Computing has its headquarters in
San Jose, California. http://www.brightcomputing.com
Bright Cluster Manager is a trademark of Bright Computing, Inc.
All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.