| Edit Values | |
| Frontier | |
| General Info | |
| Sponsors | U.S. Department of Energy |
| Designers | AMD, Cray |
| Operators | Oak Ridge National Laboratory |
| Introduction | 2021 |
| Peak FLOPS | 1.5 exaFLOPS |
| Price | $600,000,000 |
| Succession | |
Frontier (OLCF-5) is Summit's successor, a planned exascale supercomputer that will be operated by the DoE Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Frontier is expected to go into operation in the 2021-2022 timeframe.
Contents
History[edit]
Frontier is a planned exascale supercomputer with a theoretical peak performance of over 1,500 petaFLOPS (1.5 EF). The design goal of Frontier is to achieve around 50-100x performance improvement in real science applications or alternatively around 5-10x application performance improvement over Summit.
Overview[edit]
Frontier is expected to be one of the fastest - if not the fastest - supercomputer when delivered in 2021. Comprising over 100 Shasta cabinets, each node will feature a custom AMD EPYC (likely a Milan derivative) along with four custom Radeon GPUs. Interconnects will be comprised of AMD infinity fabric for the node and Slingshot for the system. All in all, Frontier is targeting 2-4x the performance and capacity of Summit's I/O subsystem and 5-10x the real-application performance of Summit with an expected peak performance of over 1.5 exaFLOPS.
Architecture[edit]
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See also[edit]
| designer | AMD + and Cray + |
| introductory date | 2021 + |
| logo | |
| main image | |
| name | Frontier + |
| operator | Oak Ridge National Laboratory + |
| peak flops (double-precision) | 1.5e+18 FLOPS (1.5e+15 KFLOPS, 1,500,000,000,000 MFLOPS, 1,500,000,000 GFLOPS, 1,500,000 TFLOPS, 1,500 PFLOPS, 1.5 EFLOPS, 0.0015 ZFLOPS) + |
| release price | $ 600,000,000.00 (€ 540,000,000.00, £ 486,000,000.00, ¥ 61,998,000,000.00) + |
| sponsor | United States Department of Energy (DOE) + |