The Maths/Physics SCAN


LATEST NEWS: SCAN suspended in Huxley 410 and 411 until June 29th

To allow final year students to be able to undertake long-running computation projects, the SCAN in Hulxey 410 and 411 is being suspended for 6 weeks from the evening of Tuesday, May 15th, until Friday, June 29th. The PCs in these rooms will remain running Windows full-time during this period but normal SCAN facilities will resume on the evening of the 29th, with Huxley 411 booting into SCAN mode at 6pm and 411 following at 8pm. In the meantime, Huxley 215 will not be affected by this change in SCAN operating times and will be running the SCAN as normal.

We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause but undergraduate projects are a high academic priority at this time of year.

These pages are currently being brought up to date and will include new material and more information about becoming a SCAN user, using the facilities, etc and some more enhancements are planned for the near future.



What is the Maths/Physics SCAN?

The Maths SuperComputer At Night initiative harnesses the power of many individual PCs to form a supercomputer capable of carrying out very large computational tasks such as model simulations, etc. If you can imagine a large computer containing not just one or two CPUs (Central Processing Unit, or processors) but 50, 100 or 200 of them plus a huge amount of memory, this is a very good approximation of the Maths supercomputer. Currently, all 36 of the HP dc7100 PCs in Huxley room 215 plus the 43 HP Evo 530 PCs in 410 and 411 form part of this cluster outside of normal college hours - this gives us a total of 79 CPUs and 115 gigabytes of memory. As these computers would otherwise be idle at night and at weekends and during college holidays, this gives us many megaflops of raw processing power for no real cost.

How does it work?

These machines all have Windows XP Professional and Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation 4 installed; these computers operate as normal PCs during the daytime and are dual-boot, meaning they can be booted into either Windows or Linux. At the end of the day when the room is closed to students, the machines shut down automatically and then boot FreeBSD UNIX from a network boot server, running UNIX entirely in RAM (memory) and leaving the machine's own hard disk untouched.

Each system is essentially an autonomous node but they are all networked together and can communicate with each other and with the controller. So each system could be thought of as a CPU with its own memory attached and is linked to other CPUs and memories in the SCAN.

The computational work to be done is then downloaded onto the boot server (which is also the SCAN's central controller), which knows how to divide up the tasks involved and distribute them to each PC in the SCAN for processing. Output from the computations is sent back to the controller and written to disk files, etc in the usual way on the controller's disks, not the PC's disk.

Early in the morning, after the SCAN has worked all night, the cluster shuts down automatically and reboots back into Windows, ready for the room's reopening to students.

At what times is the SCAN operational?

As the SCAN is distributed over three different rooms with differing opening times, the number of CPUs available in the SCAN varies according to the day of the week and also, the time of day. From Monday to Thursday the SCAN is operational with 18 CPUs from 6 pm in 411 when the Maths library closes, from 8 pm in 410 with another 25 CPUs and from 10.45pm in 215 with the full complement of 79 CPUs; all three SCAN CPU groups then run until 7.30am the following morning. On Friday evenings, the SCAN groups in rooms 410 and 411 start up at the same times as for the other weekdays and continue to run over the weekend until 7.30am the following Monday. However, the PCs in room 215 continue to be available for student use throughout Saturday and Sunday between 7.30 am and 10.45 pm.

During the Easter, summer and Christmas vacations, rooms 410 and 215 are closed altogether from the end of term and the clusters there will be running full time as part of the SCAN over this period. We will get an awful lot of computing done! In addition, the 18 PCs in the library computing room (room 411) will join the SCAN whenever the library is closed.

If rooms 215 and 410 are closed, are there any Windows PCs I can use?

The library computing room (room 411, inside the Maths Library) houses 18 dual-boot PCs running Windows XP/Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation 4 which are available to all users during library opening hours. During the night and at weekends, however, these machines reboot into FreeBSD UNIX and join the SCAN. In addition, room 409 has a number of PC's running Windows XP and two PCs running RHEL WS4 (Linux) which are available to postgraduates and year 4 undergraduates of the Mathematics department. Finally, the undergraduate common room 212 is home to 8 new HP PC's which dual-boot both Windows XP and RHEL WS4. These systems are accessible to all Maths users at any time.

These computers should satisfy the requirement for undergraduate computing facilities during college vacations but do let me know if these reduced general computing facilities cause you any undue hardship or inconvenience.

How powerful is the SCAN?

Percolation code written by a Maths Physics researcher and run on the Maths SCAN has broken several records that were previously set by a Cray MP3 supercomputer, completing simulations in a shorter time than this million+ dollar machine.

Future plans

There are a lot of Windows PCs sitting idle at night and at weekends in the department so we are looking at these hungrily, especially as the ongoing equipment renewal is putting increasingly more powerful computers onto people's desktops.

Older SCAN items:

March 24th, 2006: operating system upgraded to FreeBSD 6.0
March 1st, 2004: SCAN news update
July 21st, 2003: Introducing the SCAN

Andy Thomas

UNIX/Linux support,
Faculty of Natural Sciences

last updated: 15.05.2007