Hewlett Packard Enterprise announces its new high performance computing (HPC) and artificial
intelligence (AI) infrastructure portfolio that includes
leadership-class HPE Cray Supercomputing EX solutions and two systems
optimized for large language model (LLM) training, natural language
processing (NLP) and multi-modal model training. The new supercomputing
solutions are designed to help global customers fast-track scientific
research and invention.
"Service
providers and nations investing in sovereign AI initiatives are
increasingly turning to high-performance computing as the critical
backbone enabling large-scale AI training that accelerates discovery and
innovation," said Trish Damkroger, senior vice president and general
manager, HPC & AI Infrastructure Solutions at HPE. "Our customers
turn to us to fast-track their AI system deployment to realize value
faster and more efficiently by leveraging our world-leading HPC
solutions and decades of experience in delivering, deploying and
servicing fully-integrated systems."
End-to-end portfolio of industry-leading HPC solutions: HPE Cray Supercomputing EX
HPE leads the way providing some of the fastest and most energy efficient supercomputers
in the world. Based on HPE Cray Supercomputing EX systems, HPE's
net-new offerings for its entire leadership-class HPC portfolio are
designed for research institutions entrusted with solving the world's
biggest problems and government entities developing sovereign AI
initiatives. The portfolio is based on the industry's first 100% fanless direct liquid cooling system architecture and
spans every layer of HPE's supercomputing solutions including compute
nodes, networking and storage, which are supplemented by a new software
offering.
- HPE Cray Supercomputing EX4252 Gen 2 Compute Blade -
Capable of delivering up to 98,304 cores in a single cabinet, the HPE
Cray Supercomputing EX4252 Gen 2 Compute Blade delivers the most
powerful one-rack unit system available for supercomputing. Featuring
eight 5th Gen
AMD EPYCTM processors, this compute blade offers the benefit of CPU
density, allowing customers to realize higher-performing compute within
the same space. HPE Cray Supercomputing EX4252 Gen 2 Compute Blade will
be available Spring 2025.
- HPE Cray Supercomputing EX154n Accelerator Blade -
To drastically reduce the time it takes to complete a supercomputing
workload, the HPE Cray Supercomputing EX154n Accelerator Blade can
accommodate up to 224 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs in a single cabinet.
Featuring the NVIDIA GB200 Grace Blackwell NVL4 Superchip, each
accelerator blade holds four NVIDIA NVLinkTM-connected Blackwell GPUs
unified with two NVIDIA Grace CPUs over NVIDIA NVLink-C2C. General
availability for HPE Cray Supercomputing EX154n Accelerator Blade is
expected by the end of 2025.
- HPE Slingshot interconnect 400 -
The next generation of HPE's exascale-capable interconnect portfolio
offers network interface controllers (NICs), cables and switches at 400
gigabit-per-second speeds. HPE Slingshot interconnect 400 delivers twice
the line speed over the previous generationi while
offering features like automated congestion management and adaptive
routing for ultra-low tail latency, allowing customers to run large
workloads with significantly less network infrastructure. This version
of HPE Slingshot will be available for clusters based on HPE Cray
Supercomputing EX systems beginning Fall 2025.
- HPE Cray Supercomputing Storage Systems E2000 -
This high-performance storage system designed for large-scale
supercomputers more than doubles the input/output (I/O) performance
compared to the previous generationii.
HPE Cray Supercomputing Storage Systems E2000 is based on the open
source Lustre file system and enables better utilization of both CPU and
GPU-based compute nodes by reducing idle time during I/O operations.
The HPC storage system will become generally available on HPE Cray
Supercomputing EX systems in early 2025.
- HPE Cray Supercomputing User Services Software -
HPE is introducing a new software offering that improves the user
experience of running compute-intensive workloads. Available now, HPE
Cray Supercomputing User Services Software includes features that help
customers optimize system efficiency, regulate power consumption, and
flexibly run diverse workloads on supercomputing infrastructure.
New HPE ProLiant Compute XD server family optimizes for AI model training and tuning
HPE
continues the rollout of a new category of servers that enables
customers to streamline deployment of large, highly-performant AI
clusters. Designed for service providers and large enterprises training
their own AI models, HPE ProLiant Compute XD servers leverage the
company's expertise in installing and deploying large AI systems.
Optional HPE Services are available to support building, customization,
integration, validation, and full testing of the solution within HPE's
state-of-the-art manufacturing facility to expedite on-site deployment.
Only
available on HPE ProLiant Compute servers, HPE Integrated Lights-Out
(iLO) management technology enables select authorized personnel with
out-of-band remote control access to servers, thereby improving security
over standard in-band network access.
- HPE ProLiant Compute XD680 server -
Optimized with price-for-performance in mind, the air-cooled HPE
ProLiant Compute XD680 server is designed to address demanding AI
training, tuning and inferencing workloads. An HPE-designed chassis
houses eight Intel® Gaudi® 3 AI accelerators in a single compact node.
HPE ProLiant Compute XD680 server with Intel Gaudi 3 will be available
in December 2024.
- HPE ProLiant Compute XD685 server -
For customers prioritizing performance, competitive advantage and
energy efficiency, a new version of the HPE ProLiant Compute XD685
server will become available with NVIDIA GPUs to accelerate training for
large, complex AI models. The server is powered by eight NVIDIA H200
SXM Tensor Core GPUs or NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs in a five rack-unit
chassis and leverages HPE's multi-decades expertise in liquid cooling to
efficiently cool GPUs, CPUs and switches. The NVIDIA HGX H200 8-GPU
version of HPE ProLiant Compute XD685 server will become available in
early 2025 and HPE will be time-to-market with NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs.
A version of HPE ProLiant Compute XD685 server featuring eight AMD InstinctTM MI325X accelerators and two AMD EPYCTM CPUs was previously announced in
October. HPE ProLiant Compute XD servers are part of HPE's
comprehensive AI offerings that include HPE Private Cloud AI and HPE
ProLiant Compute DL servers.
As
the needs of customers evolve, HPE continues to push the boundaries of
innovation by meeting market demands and demonstrating why HPE is sought
after to support the growing number of traditional supercomputing
customers that are using AI models to enhance scientific discovery. Find
HPE solutions on display at SC24 (booth #2219) in Atlanta, November
17-22 for more information on the next-generation of HPC and large-scale
AI systems.