IT Week: How much demand is there for distributed computing power
among enterprises?
Songnian Zhou: We have customers ramping up application processing demands very
quickly, and they cannot do it with the energy consumption and space limitations
of their own datacentres. It is becoming an absolute must to utilise distributed
resources, and individual applications cannot do that. Ensuring 80 to 90 per
cent server utilisation, even 100 per cent in some cases, is the key, and
accessing 1,500 processor cores simultaneously is pretty much the average for
most usages.
What sorts of companies buy in to grid computing solutions?
The high-performance computing (HPC) and grid computing market is expanding from
its traditional niche and is spreading deeper into the enterprise market. One
group is peer to peer, where different organisations agree to share their
resources in advance. The other is corporates who own all the computing
resources and want to share it among different divisions and offices. Typical
customers for us are those in the financial services sector, running pre- and
post-market analytics applications, but we also have customers in aerospace and
electronics industries, and across a bunch of vertical markets.
What does the Platform Symphony 4.0 software do?
Symphony 4.0 is an application infrastructure designed to support distributed
computing in parallel, clustered server environments. It is a decision-making
piece of software, a central management module, which uses agents to organise
all of the distributed computing resources, whether servers, switches, operating
systems, storage, data or software licences, to ensure that they are all brought
to bear. Platform tends to focus on the infrastructure software, and our ISV
partners, like SAS, focus on the end user application. We also use our VM
Orchestrator product specifically for distributed workloads hosted within
virtual machines.
How do you make sure that everybody on the grid is guaranteed to get
the resource they need, when they need it?
We call it lending and borrowing. In the peer to peer model, defined high
priority users will always have precedence when it comes to grabbing resources.
We also have a fair share policy if four peers have 120 CPU resources between
them, for example, they are always guaranteed to get at least 30 of those
whenever they need them, though they may be allocated 50 or more when their
peers have them free.
How is security handled?
The computer added to the grid has all its operating systems and libraries
populated in advance, and those machines are regularly updated. Symphony
supports all security protocols, using transport security layer (TSL) for
messaging, and LDAP for user access, as well as standard authentication and
authorisation tools. We make sure there are no conflicts on those boxes in terms
of applications existing on the same machine.
All Network Infrastructure
