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les robertson cernit0999 1

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LCB Workshop, Marseilles, 1 October 1999. Team members: Ingo Augustin, Jean-Philippe ... Holographic storage. development stalled waiting. for a new material ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: les robertson cernit0999 1


1
Technology Trackingprocessors, memory, storage,
architecures
  • Summary of conclusions
  • LCB Workshop, Marseilles, 1 October 1999
  • Team members Ingo Augustin, Jean-Philippe
    Baud, Fabien Collin, Charles Curran,
    Fabrizio Gagliardi, Frédéric Hemmer,Sverre
    Jarp, Gordon Lee, Alessandro Marchioro,
    Bernd Panzer Steindel, Les Robertson, Ben
    Segal, Rainer Többicke, Pierre Vande Vyvre

2
processors, memories, basic systems
  • Previous report (1996) was
  • pessimistic about frequency
  • optimistic about parallelism (instructions/cycle)
  • about right for performance and cost
  • The Semiconductor Industry Association 1997
    roadmap predicts a new generation every 2 years
    with 0.1? at 2 GHz appearing around LHC startup
  • Previous forecasts have been too
    conservativeBUT we start to come close to
    fundamental limits like the thickness of the gate
    oxide and power dissipationfor which novel
    solutions are required

3
Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) 1997
technology forecast
Solution being pursued No known solution
4
Processor Cost Caveats
  • Estimated cost in 2005
  • 0.75-1.60 per CERN-Unit
  • CAUTION!
  • Investments, costs and prices
  • fabulous fab costs
  • production volume?
  • competition?
  • Achieved parallelism
  • the best processors only reach 1.8 ipc on integer
    codes
  • will Merced make a significant advance?
  • compilers may be as important as semiconductors
  • Home office PCs are the driving force

5
Secondary Storage
75 of hard disks go into PCs
  • hard disk market is big healthy
  • 30B with 5-6 large manufacturers
  • areal density should continue to evolve at 60
    per year
  • from 4 Gbits/inch2 to about 60 Gbits/inch2 in
    2005
  • 20-25 Gbits/inch2 demonstrated
  • and prices should continue to decrease at 35
    per year
  • 2-4/GB in 2005
  • Technology limits - room for optimism
  • super-paramagnetic limit currently around 30-40
    Gbits/inch2
  • competitive RD in materials and heads
  • alternative technologies using advanced
    magneto-optics
  • Data rate per unit of installed capacity - could
    be a concern
  • data rate increases only with the linear density
  • if the mass market does not demand significantly
    smaller disks we shall have to purchase more
    capacity than we really need

6
Optics Exotics
  • Paradoxically
  • now that magnetic recording has caught up with
    optical recording densities (5 Gbits/inch2 with
    a red laser)
  • the entertainment business has produced a product
    which could play an important role in low end
    computer storage
  • DVD-RAM - 9.4GB in 2000
  • access time, data transfer rate - no match for
    hard disk
  • but may well displace magnetic tape in the home
    office
  • Holographic storage
  • development stalled waitingfor a new material
  • active consortium (military interest)
  • Nothing else beyond the stage of technology
    demonstration

STOP PRESS The Keele Ultra High Density
Memory 2.3 TB on a credit card for 50
7
Tertiary Storage
  • Major doubts about the long term
  • the market driver is backup and archive --
    write once, read never
  • the commodity market will have strong
    competition from DVD-- low-end tape devices may
    disappear
  • BUT - several recent/announced products for the
    data centre (half inch, linear)
  • STK 9840, DLT 8000, LTO
  • with strong roadmaps for the next 5-6 years
  • 2005 20-50 MB/sec gt100GB per cartridge
  • Costs
  • reliable drives unlikely to go below 10-20K
  • robotics - gt20 per slot (no improvement on
    todays best price)

1998 Estimated tape revenue by device class
0.5"19 mm Helical
5B market
6
0.25" Linear
9
8 mm Helical
12
0.5" Linear
50
4 mm Helical
23
8
Tape media costs
  • At LHC media costs will dominate
  • cannot assume that there will be successors to
    current product families in the next 5 years
  • so we may only see factor of 4 improvement in
    recording density over todays half inch linear
  • giving about 0.50 per GB for raw tape
  • Worst case scenario?
  • If hard disk is 2/GB and DVD-RAM 0.20many
    applications will abandon tape for the higher
    functionality of random access storage
  • Big problem for the magnetic tape business - and
    HEP
  • We should be very careful about planning for tape
    as a medium for active data storage

9
Storage Management Systems
  • Lack of standardisation gt no exchange of data
  • Limited high end market
  • missing functionality
  • product plans / survival unclear
  • Relatively straightforward HEP requirements
  • good scalability, predictable performance
  • Could be a case where a HEP solution would be
    better and affordable (but surely not multiple
    HEP solutions!)
  • Storage Area Networks, Global Shared File Systems
  • very interesting developments
  • could mature by 2005, and should be followed
  • but watch the impact on storage costs

10
Architecture, Interconnects Clusters
  • Exotic architectures and technologies will have
    no impact on general purpose computing in the
    next 5 years
  • quantum, optical .. multi-threaded (TERA), chaos,
    ..
  • games consoles, integrated TV/Internet
    devices will help to squeeze prices, push
    performance of regular PCs
  • Expect the distinction between large SMPs, NUMA
    shared memory and SPP systems to become less
    clear
  • BUT large integrated systems are likely to remain
    relatively expensive and be unnecessary for HEP
  • Should see healthy developments in scalable
    clusters with standardised high performance
    commodity interconnects
  • management tools a concern
  • there are many promising development projects,
    but they may emphasise high availability/performan
    ce rather than high throughput

11
Summary
full report http//nicewww.cern.ch/les/pasta/wel
come.html
  • processors OK
  • disks OK - but watch the I/O-rate/capacity ratio
  • Concern about the future of magnetic tapes
  • it would be wise to consider using disk for
    active data
  • relegating tape to archive and data exchange
  • The inherent HEP parallelism makes it realistic
    to build large computing fabrics from inexpensive
    components
  • But the management - farms and storage - may
    require HEP developments
  • Maybe open source may allow this to be done as
    part of a wider collaboration
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