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Formation Modeling

Testbeds

Our research in formation modeling and simulation depends on the use of high-speed, distributed computation resources for research validation, experimentation and design space exploration, and preparation of algorithms and products for infusion into other programs. To this end we have constructed several low-cost supercomputers, modelled on the Beowulf-class supercomputers pioneered by Donald Becker at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

The first of these was a 12-CPU cluster computer constructed from independent off-the-shelf PC computers. Connected by an ordinary private Ethernet switched network, this proof-of-concept computer was used to test various communication, synchronization, and other attributes of cluster computing critical to high-speed simulation.

ShuttlePC clusterViewfinder (seen at right, bottom of rack) is one of our current cluster computer testbeds. Constructed of five dual-cpu machines, it contains 10 Athlon MP 1800+ processors, 10 gigbytes of RAM, and 0.8 Terabytes of disk storage. For connectivity, it includes a dual-bonded, switched, fast-ethernet backbone, and additionally has a 1.3 gigabit, low-latency SCI backplane as well. Our 5-spacecraft formation simulator reaches maximum performance on this cluster, utilizing all ten CPUs.

Our innovative ShuttlePC cluster (seen at right, top of rack) consists of 12 single-cpu Shuttle XPC SS-40G small form-factor (SFF) computers, each housing an Athlon 1800+ CPU, 512 Megabytes of RAM, and not much else. These diskless nodes are connected via switched fast ethernet to a Shuttle XPC SK-41G master that serves as a boot host. This diskless configuration allows us to upgrade the cluster software and OS by simply rebooting the system after upgrading the master node. A spare master node makes it easy to split this cluster into portable testbeds for demonstration purposes.


 
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Last Updated November 19, 2003

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