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Sol is Lehigh's newest Linux cluster replacing Corona and other ancillary Level 2 resources. Following our tradition of naming high performance computing clusters after stars or celestial phenomena, Sol is named after the nearest star.
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In publications, reports, and presentations that utilize Sol, Hawk and Ceph, please acknowledge Lehigh University using the following statement: "Portions of this research were conducted on Lehigh University's Research Computing infrastructure partially supported by NSF Award 2019035" |
Sol is a heterogeneous cluster launched on Oct 1, 2016 with a total of 34 nodes, 26 are Condo investments by two CAS faculty. All nodes provide 500GB scratch storage for running jobs and are interconnected with 2:1 oversubscribed EDR (100Gbps) Infiniband fabric. In Fall 2018, a new Ceph storage cluster was installed that provides a 11TB CephFS global scratch space for storing temporary data for 7 days after completion of jobs.
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- In Jan. 2017, each of the 25 Condo nodes were upgraded to include two GTX 1080 GPU cards.
- In 2017, Condo Investments from RCEAS and CBE faculty added 22 nodes and 16 nVIDIA GTX 1080 GPU cards.
- In 2018, Condo Investments from RCEAS and CAS faculty added 24 nodes and 48 nVIDIA RTX 2080 TI GPU cards.
- In Mar. 2019, Condo Investments from RCEAS faculty added 1 node.
- In May-June September 2020, Condo Investments from CAS, RCEAS and COH faculty added 8 nodes.
- In Spring 2022, Condo Investments from CAS and RCEAS faculty added 6 4 nodes.
As of MarFeb. 20192022
Processor Type | Number of Nodes | Number of CPUs | Number of GPUs | CPU Memory (GB) | GPU Memory (GB) | CPU TFLOPs | GPU TFLOPs | Annual SUs | ||||||||
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2.3 GHz E5-2650v3 | 9 | 180 | 10 | 1152 | 80 | 5.76 | 2.57 | 1,576,800 | ||||||||
2.3 GHz E5-2670v3 | 33 | 792 | 62 | 4224 | 496 | 25.344 | 15.934 | 6,937,920 | ||||||||
2.2 GHz E5-2650v4 | 14 | 336 | 896 | 9.6768 | 2,943,360 | |||||||||||
2.6 GHz E5-2640v3 | 1 | 16 | 512 | 0.5632 | 140,160 | |||||||||||
2.3 GHz Gold 6140 | 24 | 864 | 48 | 4608 | 528 | 3941.744472 | 18.392 | 7,568,640 | ||||||||
2.6 GHz Gold 6240 | 6 | 216 | 1152 | 10.368 | 1,892,160 | 87 | 2404 | 120 | 12544 | 1104 | 93.184 | 36.130 | 21,059,040 | |||
2.1 GHz Gold 6230R | 2 | 104 | 768 | 4.3264 | 911,040 | |||||||||||
3.0 GHz Gold 6348R | 1 | 48 | 5 | 192 | 200 | 3.072 | 48.5 | 420,480 | ||||||||
3.0GHz EPYC 7302 (Coming Soon) | 3 | 96 | 24 | 768 | 1152 | 4.3008 | 28.08 | 840,960 | ||||||||
93 | 2652 | 149 | 14272 | 2456 | 104.8832 | 112.6364 | 23,231,520 |
System Configuration
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Intel XEON processors AVX2 and AVX512 frequencies
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Dimitrios Vavylonis, Department of Physics: 1 20-core compute node
Annual allocation: 175,200 SUs
Wonpil Im, Department of Biological Sciences:
25 24-core compute node with 2 GTX 1080 cards per node (5,256,000 SUs)
12 36-core compute nodes with 4 RTX 2080 cards per node (3,784,320 SUs)
3 32-core compute nodes with 8 A40 GPUs per node (840960 SUs)
Total Annual allocation: 9,040881,320 280 SUs
Anand Jagota, Department of Chemical Engineering: 1 24-core compute node
Annual allocation: 210,240 SUs
Brian Chen, Department of Computer Science and Engineering:
- 1 24-core compute node (210,240 SUs)
- 2 52-core compute nodes (911,040 SUs)
Annual allocation: 2101,1212,240 280 SUs
Edmund Webb III & Alparslan Oztekin, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics: 6 24-core compute node
Annual allocation: 1,261,440 SUs
Jeetain Mittal & Srinivas Rangarajan, Department of Chemical Engineering: 13 24-core Broadwell based compute node and 16 GTX 1080 cards
Annual allocation: 2,733,120 SUs
Seth Richards-Shubik, Department of Economics
Annual allocation: 140,160 SUs
Ganesh Balasubramanian, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics: 7 36-core Skylake based compute node
Annual allocation: 2,207,520 SUs
Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering: 2 36-core Skylake based compute node
Annual allocation: 630,720 SUs
Lisa Fredin, Department of Chemistry:
2 36-core Skylake based compute node
- 4 36-core Cascade Lake based compute node
Annual allocation: 1,892,160 SUs
Paolo Bocchini, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering: 1 24-core Broadwell based compute node
Annual Allocation: 210,240 SUs
Hannah Dailey, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics: 1 36-core Skylake based compute node
Annual allocation: 315,360 SUs
- College of Health: 2 36-core Cascade Lake based compute node
- Annual allocation: 630,720 SUs
Accounts
A Principal Investigator can request accounts for his/her users for $50/user/year. Each account is provided with 150GB home storage quota. Every user will need to have an active allocation to use Sol. Sharing of accounts is explicitly forbidden and will result in forfeiture of accounts.
If additional storage is required, a PI can purchase a Ceph Storage project for his/her group based on a 5 year purchase. PIs who purchase a Ceph Storage project, minimum $375/TB, can opt for using their Ceph space for home directories and have their account fees waived for the life of the Ceph project.
Allocations
Principal Investigators, who are not Condo Investors, called Hotel Investors henceforth, will be able to purchase computing time, if available, on an annual basis. Computing time equivalent to 8 20-core compute nodes or 1,400,000 SUs is available for general use on an annual basis. The cost per SU is fixed at 1¢ with a minimum annual buy-in of 50,000 SUs with increments of 10,000 SUs.
Minimum Annual Allocation (50K SUs): $500
10K Increments: $100
The allocation cycle is fixed at one year and unused allocations (the minimum and any increments purchased during that cycle) will not rollover to the next allocation cycle nor be refunded. The initial allocation cycle will begin on Oct 1, 2016 and end on Sep. 30, 2017. Implementing a rolling allocation cycle for Hotel Investors i.e. allocation cycle begins the day you initiated a purchase rather than a rigid start date (Oct 1.) is a work in progress.
Condo Investors who utilize their allocated cycles before the cycle ends can purchase additional 10K increments, if available, and are not subject to the minimum allocation purchase. However, any 10K increments purchased must be expended before the next allocation cycle begins. There are no refunds or rollovers of SUs from one allocation cycle to the next.
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- Keith Moored, Department of Mechanical Engineering and Mechanics: 1 48-core Cascade Lake Refresh compute node with 5 A100 GPUs
- Annual allocation: 420,480 SUs
Comparison with AWS
Methods/Notes:
Adapted from the code at https://gitlab.beocat.ksu.edu/Admin-Public/amazon-cost-comparison
Costs for Spot/On-Demand pricing last updated: August 6, 2020 from https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/spot/pricing. These costs fluctuate and Spot pricing requires that users accept job-preemption; no jobs on Sol are currently preemptable.
Amazon instance types selected were those which conform to Sol job sizes regarding memory, core counts, and GPUs. These are, g4dn.x-12xlarge, p3.8xlarge, c5n.large-18xlarge, and r5.8-16xlarge. Sizing and run time of actual Sol jobs from Slurm's internal database were used to match instance types to generate a cost for each job run on Sol.
Costs for AWS do not include data storage, networking, VPN/transit, data ingress/egress, or any other charges aside from the EC2 instance price. The code calculates cost as per-second even if the job ran for less than one hour, and assumes that since an Amazon VCPU is half a core, a job will take twice as long on Amazon as on Sol.
Accounts & Allocations
For accessing Sol, please see revised policy for Accounts & Allocations
Logging into Sol
Sol can be accessed via SSH using a SSH Client. Linux and Mac users can login to Sol by entering the following command in a terminal:
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ssh username@sol.cc.lehigh.edu |
If you are off campus, then there are two options
- Start a vpn session and then login to Sol using the ssh command above
- Use ssh gateway as a jump host first and then login to Sol using the above ssh command on the ssh gateway prompt. If your ssh is from the latest version of openssh, then you can use the following command
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ssh -J username@ssh.cc.lehigh.edu username@sol.cc.lehigh.edu |
If you are using the ssh gateway, you might want to add the following to your ${HOME}/.ssh/config file on your local systemsystem
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Host *ssh HostName ssh.cc.lehigh.edu Port 22 # This is an example - replace alp514 with your Lehigh ID User alp514 Host *sol HostName sol.cc.lehigh.edu Port 22 User <LehighID> ProxyCommand ssh ssh nc-W %h:%p %pssh |
to simplify the ssh and scp (for file transfer) command. You will be prompted for your password twice - first for ssh and then for sol
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ssh sol scp sol:<path to source directory>/filename <path to destination directory>/filename |
If you are using public key authentication, please add a passphrase to your key. Passwordless authentication is a security risk. Use ssh-agent and ssh-add to manage your public keys. See https://kb.iu.edu/d/aeww for details.
Windows users will need to install a SSH Client to access Sol. Lehigh Research Computing recommends MobaXterm since it can be configured to use the SSH Gateway as jump host. DUO Authentication is activated for faculty and staff on the SSH Gateway. If a window pops up for password enter your Lehigh password. The second pop up is for DUO, it only says DUO Login. Enter 1 for Push to DUO or 2 for call to registered phone.