Why Use HPC?

Last updated on 2024-11-26 | Edit this page

Overview

Questions

  • Why would I be interested in High Performance Computing (HPC)?
  • What can I expect to learn from this course?

Objectives

  • Be able to describe what an HPC system is.
  • Identify how an HPC system could benefit you.

Why Use These Computers?

What do you need?

Talk to your neighbour about your research. How does computing help you do your research? How could more computing help you do more or better research?

Frequently, research problems that use computing can outgrow the desktop or laptop computer where they started:

  • A statistics student wants to do cross-validate their model. This involves running the model 1000 times — but each run takes an hour. Running on their laptop will take over a month!
  • A genomics researcher has been using small datasets of sequence data, but soon will be receiving a new type of sequencing data that is 10 times as large. It’s already challenging to open the datasets on their computer — analysing these larger datasets will probably crash it.
  • An engineer is using a fluid dynamics package that has an option to run in parallel. So far, they haven’t used this option on their desktop, but in going from 2D to 3D simulations, simulation time has more than tripled and it might be useful to take advantage of that feature.

In all these cases, what is needed is access to more computers than can be used at the same time. Luckily, large scale computing systems — shared computing resources with lots of computers — are available at many universities, labs, or through national networks. These resources usually have more central processing units(CPUs), CPUs that operate at higher speeds, more memory, more storage, and faster connections with other computer systems. They are frequently called “clusters”, “supercomputers” or resources for “high performance computing” or HPC. In this lesson, we will usually use the terminology of HPC and HPC cluster.

Using a cluster often has the following advantages for researchers:

  • Speed. With many more CPU cores, often with higher performance specs, than a typical laptop or desktop, HPC systems can offer significant speed up.
  • Volume. Many HPC systems have both the processing memory (RAM) and disk storage to handle very large amounts of data. Terabytes of RAM and petabytes of storage are available for research projects.
  • Efficiency. Many HPC systems operate a pool of resources that are drawn on by many users. In most cases when the pool is large and diverse enough the resources on the system are used almost constantly.
  • Cost. Bulk purchasing and government funding mean that the cost to the research community for using these systems in significantly less that it would be otherwise.
  • Convenience. Maybe your calculations just take a long time to run or are otherwise inconvenient to run on your personal computer. There’s no need to tie up your own computer for hours when you can use someone else’s instead.

This is how a large-scale compute system like a cluster can help solve problems like those listed at the start of the lesson.

Thinking ahead

How do you think using a large-scale computing system will be different from using your laptop? Talk to your neighbour about some differences you may already know about, and some differences/difficulties you imagine you may run into.

On Command Line

Using HPC systems often involves the use of a shell through a command line interface (CLI) and either specialized software or programming techniques. The shell is a program with the special role of having the job of running other programs rather than doing calculations or similar tasks itself. What the user types goes into the shell, which then figures out what commands to run and orders the computer to execute them. (Note that the shell is called “the shell” because it encloses the operating system in order to hide some of its complexity and make it simpler to interact with.) The most popular Unix shell is Bash, the Bourne Again SHell (so-called because it’s derived from a shell written by Stephen Bourne). Bash is the default shell on most modern implementations of Unix and in most packages that provide Unix-like tools for Windows.

Interacting with the shell is done via a command line interface (CLI) on most HPC systems. In the earliest days of computers, the only way to interact with early computers was to rewire them. From the 1950s to the 1980s most people used line printers. These devices only allowed input and output of the letters, numbers, and punctuation found on a standard keyboard, so programming languages and software interfaces had to be designed around that constraint and text-based interfaces were the way to do this. A typing-based interface is often called a command-line interface, or CLI, to distinguish it from a graphical user interface, or GUI, which most people now use. The heart of a CLI is a read-evaluate-print loop, or REPL: when the user types a command and then presses the Enter (or Return) key, the computer reads it, executes it, and prints its output. The user then types another command, and so on until the user logs off.

Learning to use Bash or any other shell sometimes feels more like programming than like using a mouse. Commands are terse (often only a couple of characters long), their names are frequently cryptic, and their output is lines of text rather than something visual like a graph. However, using a command line interface can be extremely powerful, and learning how to use one will allow you to reap the benefits described above.

The rest of this lesson

The only way to use these types of resources is by learning to use the command line. This introduction to HPC systems has two parts:

  • We will learn to use the UNIX command line (also known as Bash).
  • We will use our new Bash skills to connect to and operate a high-performance computing supercomputer.

The skills we learn here have other uses beyond just HPC: Bash and UNIX skills are used everywhere, be it for web development, running software, or operating servers. It’s become so essential that Microsoft now ships it as part of Windows! Knowing how to use Bash and HPC systems will allow you to operate virtually any modern device. With all of this in mind, let’s connect to a cluster and get started!

Key Points

  • High Performance Computing (HPC) typically involves connecting to very large computing systems elsewhere in the world.
  • These HPC systems can be used to do work that would either be impossible or much slower or smaller systems.
  • The standard method of interacting with such systems is via a command line interface such as Bash.