IBM Thursday said it had developed technology to speed up the way large computer networks access and share information.Under a project code-named “Fastball,” IBM’s ASC Purple supercomputer has been able to achieve 102G bytes per second of sustained read-and-write performance to a single file–the equivalent of downloading 25,000 songs in a second over the Internet, according to IBM. IBM’s General Parallel File System (GPFS) software was used to manage the transfer of data between thousands of processors and disk storage devices. IBM said it had to enhance the software in several areas to handle such fast data rates. SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe For example, it employed new fencing techniques to prevent individual hardware failures from causing the overall system to fail and added new capabilities to orchestrate flow control between all of the different hardware components in the system. “If they all go real fast at the same time, you get a traffic jam and performance goes down,” said Chris Maher, director of high-performance computing development for IBM’s Systems and Technology Group.ASC Purple, the world’s third most powerful supercomputer according to the Top500 list, is housed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). The Fastball project capabilities were demonstrated at LLNL. IBM supplied the computer to the U.S. Department of Energy and LLNL for use in nuclear weapons research. The Fastball project combined IBM servers, a high-performance computing switch network and storage subsystems tied together through the enhanced version of the GPFS software. IBM used 416 individual storage controllers combined with 104 Power-based eServer p575 nodes.In the Fastball demonstration, 1,000 clients requested a single file at the same time. Through virtualization techniques, the software then spread that file across hundreds of disk drives. The resulting file system was 1.6 petabytes in size. Researchers for the project say this kind of computing could be applied to different applications.“You can imagine the kind of problems you can solve with this, like a tsunami warning device that would scrutinize huge amounts of information from the ocean and then analyze that quite quickly, or for homeland security applications, where you need to scan images of people and match those images against large databases,” Maher said. Other applications could include medical research and online gaming, Maher said. A future area of focus for the researchers is developing ways to match appropriate storage resources to data automatically as data is generated based on predefined policies, Maher said. -Shelley Solheim, IDG News ServiceFor related coverage, read IBM Sets Up SOA Hub in India and IBM, Novell Back ID Manager Tool.Keep checking in at our CIO News Alerts page for updated news coverage. Related content feature Gen AI success starts with an effective pilot strategy To harness the promise of generative AI, IT leaders must develop processes for identifying use cases, educate employees, and get the tech (safely) into their hands. By Bob Violino Sep 27, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Innovation Emerging Technology feature A fluency in business and tech yields success at NATO Manfred Boudreaux-Dehmer speaks with Lee Rennick, host of CIO Leadership Live, Canada, about innovation in technology, leadership across a vast cultural landscape, and what it means to hold the inaugural CIO role at NATO. By CIO staff Sep 27, 2023 6 mins CIO IT Skills Innovation feature The demand for new skills: How can CIOs optimize their team? By Andrea Benito Sep 27, 2023 3 mins opinion The CIO event of the year: What to expect at CIO100 ASEAN Awards By Shirin Robert Sep 26, 2023 3 mins IDG Events IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe