SDSC Host Largest Academic Cloud

By Matthew Dublin

The San Diego Supercomputer Center at the University of California, San Diego, has launched what it claims is the largest academic-based cloud storage system in the country. The system is capable of an initial raw 5.5 petabyte of storage and is 100 percent disk-based with high-speed 10 gigabit Ethernet network interconnections.

SDSC's Cloud uses two Arista Networks 7,508 switches, providing 768 total 10 gigabit Ethernet ports for more than 10Tbit/s of non-blocking, IP-based connectivity. The switches are configured using multi-chassis link aggregation, or MLAG, for both performance and failover. The cloud is built atop of the OpenStack Swift Object Storage, a scalable, open-sourced cloud operating system that was developed by NASA and Rackspace Hosting in 2010 — it currently powers some of the largest public and private cloud computing services using this scalable and proven software.

The SDSC Cloud will work with the other storage technologies at the supercomputer center, including the Data Oasis system, a Lustre-based parallel file system researchers running jobs on Triton, Trestles, and Dash supercomputers use to store their results and datasets.

Users can store their data in the cloud for as low as $3.25 per Month for 100GB or $32.50 per Terabyte per Month with no transfer costs.