SpyderByte.com ;Technical Portals 
      
 News & Information Related to Linux High Performance Computing, Linux Clustering and Cloud Computing
Home About News Archives Contribute News, Articles, Press Releases Mobile Edition Contact Advertising/Sponsorship Search Privacy
HPC Vendors
Cluster Quoter (HPC Cluster RFQ)
Hardware Vendors
Software Vendors
HPC Consultants
Training Vendors
HPC Resources
Featured Articles
Cluster Builder
Beginners
Whitepapers
Documentation
Software
Lists/Newsgroups
Books
User Groups & Organizations
HP Server Diagrams
HPC News
Latest News
Newsletter
News Archives
Search Archives
HPC Links
ClusterMonkey.net
Scalability.org
HPCCommunity.org

Beowulf.org
HPC Tech Forum (was BW-BUG)
Gelato.org
The Aggregate
Top500.org
Cluster Computing Info Centre
Coyote Gultch
Dr. Robert Brown's Beowulf Page
FreshMeat.net: HPC Software
SuperComputingOnline
HPC User Forum
GridsWatch
HPC Newsletters
Stay current on Linux HPC news, events and information.
LinuxHPC.org Newsletter

Other Mailing Lists:
Linux High Availability
Beowulf Mailing List
Gelato.org (Linux Itanium)

LinuxHPC.org
Home
About
Contact
Mobile Edition
Sponsorship

Latest News

Xinjiang Oil Company Deploys Panasas ActiveScale Storage Cluster
Posted by Cheryl Hall, Monday October 02 2006 @ 12:31PM EDT

Xinjiang Oil Company in Western China Deploys Panasas ActiveScale Storage Cluster

Partnership with Hong Kong-based ModernTech Delivers Second Major Deployment in Mainland China

Panasas, Inc. today announced that Xinjiang Oil Company in Mainland China has deployed the Panasas ActiveScale Storage Cluster™. Through a partnership with ModernTech Computer & Peripheral Ltd. in Hong Kong, Panasas is providing high performance storage to Xinjiang Oil Company to help improve reliability, increase scalability and reduce overall IT costs at the oil company’s facility in western China where aging UNIX mainframes are being replaced with newer Linux clusters.

Xinjiang Oil Company is a subsidiary of PetroChina. PetroChina is one of the three largest state-owned oil and gas exploration and production companies in China. As Xinjiang Oil Company evaluated storage systems during the transition from costly mainframe to clustered Linux computing, the oil company selected and deployed the Panasas Storage Cluster to replace legacy storage that was incapable of delivering the performance and scalability needed to support their ever-growing seismic processing applications. Currently, Xinjiang Oil Company is running 12 Panasas Storage Clusters in conjunction with 600-node Linux clusters at the company’s Department of Earth Science in western China.

“We’ve been having problems trying to match the performance of our existing storage systems with the system performance of Linux clusters for a long time,” said Jia Ya Jun, Chief Engineer of the Geophysical Research Institute Exploration and Development Institute of Xinjiang Oil Company. “The object-based Panasas storage solution totally turns things around by giving us the things we were looking for—high performance, expansibility, stability, dependability, and simplified management. Panasas storage has resolved the bottleneck problems and provided us with greater cluster performance for achieving our computing goals.”

The Panasas Storage Cluster with DirectFLOW™ software is helping PetroChina’s subsidiary drive the complexity out of its Linux clusters so that they can operate at peak performance—up to three times faster than with Xinjiang Oil Company’s previous storage—and allows IT administrators at the oil company to be more productive. The custom DirectFLOW software provides a fully parallel data path for direct, high-speed communications between Xinjiang Oil Company’s Linux clusters and Panasas storage. By doing so, costly performance bottlenecks that can cause the clusters to idle while waiting for data are eliminated.

In addition, Panasas’ integrated hardware/software storage solution has enabled Xinjiang Oil Company to avoid time-consuming and often costly deployment problems by integrating easily with the newer Linux clusters as well as with existing legacy compute systems. From within a single, global namespace, the Panasas Storage Cluster has reduced many of the previous storage management burdens so that Xinjiang Oil Company can more fully maximize its investments in clustered Linux computing and reduce the overall cost of ownership.

“We’re excited to have Xinjiang Oil Company join our growing family of oil and gas customers around the world whose highly competitive businesses rely on Panasas storage solutions to help drive business efficiencies and profitability,” said Larry Jones, vice president of Marketing at Panasas. “With the help of our valued partner ModernTech, we look forward to expanding the deployment of the Panasas Storage Cluster to additional customers throughout Mainland China.”

About ModernTech: http://www.moderntech.com.hk
About Panasas: http://www.panasas.com


< Appro Compute on Demand Drives Efficiencies in Oil and Gas | Northrop Grumman Delivers High Performance Computing Solution for Improved Hurricane Forecasting >

 

Affiliates

Cluster Monkey

HPC Community


Supercomputing 2010

- Supercomputing 2010 website...

- 2010 Beowulf Bash

- SC10 hits YouTube!

- Louisiana Governor Jindal Proclaims the week of November 14th "Supercomputing Week" in honor of SC10!








Appro: High Performance Computing Resources
IDC: Appro Xtreme-X Supercomputer Blade Solution
Analysis of the Xtreme-X architecture and management system while assessing challenges and opportunities in the technical computing market for blade servers.

Video - The Road to PetaFlop Computing
Explore the Scalable Unit concept where multiple clusters of various sizes can be rapidly built and deployed into production. This new architectural approach yields many subtle benefits to dramatically lower total cost of ownership.
White Paper - Optimized HPC Performance
Multi-core processors provide a unique set of challenges and opportunities for the HPC market. Discover MPI strategies for the Next-Generation Quad-Core Processors.

Appro and the Three National Laboratories
[Appro delivers a new breed of highly scalable, dynamic, reliable and effective Linux clusters to create the next generation of supercomputers for the National Laboratories.

AMD Opteron-based products | Intel Xeon-based products



Home About News Archives Contribute News, Articles, Press Releases Mobile Edition Contact Advertising/Sponsorship Search Privacy
     Copyright © 2001-2013 LinuxHPC.org
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds
All other trademarks are those of their owners.
    
  SpyderByte.com ;Technical Portals