CSC/ECE 506 Spring 2010/ch1 lm

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"Look through the www.top500.org site, and any other relevant material you can find, and write about supercomputer trends since the beginning of top500.org. Specifically, look at how the architectures, operating systems, and programming models have changed. What models were dominant, say, for each generation, or five-year interval? What technological trends caused the changes? Please write an integrated description. You can link to other Web sites, but your description should be self-contained."



Timeline of supercomputers

This is a list of the record-holders for fastest general-purpose supercomputer in the world, and the year each one set the record. For entries prior to 1993, this list refers to various sources CDC timeline at Computer History Museum. From 1993 to present, the list reflects the Top500 listing Directory page for Top500 lists. Result for each list since June 1993, and the "Peak speed" is given as the "Rmax" rating.

Year Supercomputer Peak speed
(Rmax)
Location
1938 Z1 1 OPS Konrad Zuse, Berlin, Germany
1941 Z3 20 OPS Konrad Zuse, Berlin, Germany
1943 Colossus 1 5 kOPS Post Office Research Station, Bletchley_Park|Bletchley Park, UK
1944 Colossus 2 (Single Processor) 25 kOPS Post Office Research Station, Bletchley_Park|Bletchley Park, UK
1946 Colossus 2 (Parallel Processor) 50 kOPS Post Office Research Station, Bletchley_Park|Bletchley Park, UK
1946
 
UPenn ENIAC
(before 1948+ modifications)
5 kOPS Department of War
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, United States|USA
1954 NORC 67 kOPS Department of Defense
Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division|U.S. Naval Proving Ground, Dahlgren, Virginia|Dahlgren, Virginia, United States|USA
1956 MIT TX-0 83 kOPS Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, Lexington, Massachusetts|Lexington, Massachusetts, United States|USA
1958 IBM AN/FSQ-7 400 kOPS U.S. Air Force sites across the continental United States|continental USA and 1 site in Canada (52 computers)
1960 LARC 250 kFLOPS Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, United States|USA
1961 IBM 7030 "Stretch" 1.2 MFLOPS AEC-Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico, United States|USA
1964 CDC 6600 3 MFLOPS Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory|AEC-Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, United States|USA
1969 CDC 7600 36 MFLOPS
1974 CDC STAR-100 100 MFLOPS
1975 Burroughs ILLIAC IV 150 MFLOPS USA
1976 Cray-1 250 MFLOPS USA (80+ sold worldwide)
1981 CDC Cyber 205 400 MFLOPS (~40 systems worldwide)
1983 Cray X-MP/4 941 MFLOPS U.S. Department of Energy (DoE)
Los Alamos National Laboratory; Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Battelle Memorial Institute|Battelle; Boeing
1984 M-13 2.4 GFLOPS USSR
1985 Cray-2/8 3.9 GFLOPS DoE-Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, United States|USA
1989 ETA10-G/8 10.3 GFLOPS USA
1990 NEC SX-3/44R 23.2 GFLOPS NEC Fuchu Plant, Fuchū,_Tokyo, Japan
1993 CM-5/1024 59.7 GFLOPS DoE-Los Alamos National Laboratory; National Security Agency
Fujitsu Numerical Wind Tunnel 124.50 GFLOPS National Aerospace Laboratory, Tokyo, Japan
Paragon XP/S 140 143.40 GFLOPS DoE-Sandia National Laboratories, New Mexico, United States|USA
1994 Fujitsu Numerical Wind Tunnel 170.40 GFLOPS National Aerospace Laboratory, Tokyo, Japan
1996 Hitachi SR2201/1024 220.4 GFLOPS University of Tokyo, Japan
Hitachi/Tsukuba CP-PACS/2048 368.2 GFLOPS Center for Computational Physics, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan
1997 Intel ASCI Red/9152 1.338 TFLOPS Sandia National Laboratories|DoE-Sandia National Laboratories, New Mexico, United States|USA
1999 Intel ASCI Red/9632 2.3796 TFLOPS
2000 IBM ASCI White 7.226 TFLOPS DoE-Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, United States|USA
2002 NEC Earth Simulator 35.86 TFLOPS Earth Simulator Center, Yokohama, Japan
2004 IBM Blue Gene|Blue Gene/L 70.72 TFLOPS DoE/IBM|IBM Rochester, Minnesota, United States|USA
2005 136.8 TFLOPS United States Department of Energy|DoE/United States National Nuclear Security Administration|U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, United States|USA
280.6 TFLOPS
2007 478.2 TFLOPS
2008 IBM IBM Roadrunner|Roadrunner 1.026 PFLOPS Los Alamos National Laboratory|DoE-Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico, United States|USA
1.105 PFLOPS
2009 Jaguar 1.759 PFLOPS DoE-Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee, United States|USA








Processors

Processor Architecture

Hello world

Processor Family

Number of Processors

Operating Systems

Operating Systems Family

Operating Systems Trend