Supermicro Delivers Direct-Liquid-Optimized NVIDIA Blackwell Solutions
Supermicro's SuperClusters with NVIDIA HGXTM B200 8-GPU, NVIDIA GB200, NVL4, and NVL72 Systems deliver AI compute density.
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November 26, 2024
Supermicro, Inc. announces the SuperCluster, an end-to-end artificial intelligence (AI) data center solution featuring the NVIDIA Blackwell platform for the era of trillion-parameter-scale generative AI. The new SuperCluster will increase the number of NVIDIA HGX B200 8-GPU systems in a liquid-cooled rack, resulting in an increase in GPU compute density compared to Supermicro's current liquid-cooled NVIDIA HGX H100 and H200-based SuperClusters, Supermicro reports.
In addition, Supermicro is enhancing the portfolio of its NVIDIA Hopper systems to address the adoption of accelerated computing for high-performance computing applications and mainstream enterprise AI.
“Supermicro has the expertise, delivery speed, and capacity to deploy the largest liquid-cooled AI data center projects in the world, containing 100,000 GPUs, which Supermicro and NVIDIA contributed to and recently deployed,” says Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “These Supermicro SuperClusters reduce power needs due to DLC efficiencies. We now have solutions that use the NVIDIA Blackwell platform. Using our Building Block approach allows us to quickly design servers with NVIDIA HGX B200 8-GPU, which can be either liquid-cooled or air-cooled. The Supermicro clusters use direct liquid cooling, resulting in higher performance, lower power consumption for the entire data center, and reduced operational expenses.”
For more information, visit: www.supermicro.com/hpc
AI Performance at Scale
The upgraded SuperCluster scalable unit is based on a rack-scale design with vertical coolant distribution manifolds (CDMs), which allow for an increased amount of compute nodes in a single rack. Newly developed cold plates and an advanced hose design improve the liquid cooling system. A new in-row CDU option for large deployments is also available. Traditional air-cooled data centers can also take advantage of the new NVIDIA HGX B200 8-GPU systems with a new air-cooled system chassis.
The new Supermicro NVIDIA HGX B200 8-GPU systems have a range of upgrades compared to the previous generation. The new system includes improvements to thermals and power delivery, support for dual 500W Intel Xeon 6 (with DDR5 MRDIMMs at 8800 MT/s), or AMD EPYCTM 9005 Series processors. A new air-cooled 10U form-factor Supermicro NVIDIA HGX B200 system features a redesigned chassis with expanded thermal headroom to accommodate eight 1000W TDP Blackwell GPUs. These systems are designed with a 1:1 GPU-to-NIC ratio supporting NVIDIA BlueField-3 SuperNICs or NVIDIA ConnectX-7 NICs for scaling across a high-performance compute fabric. In addition, two NVIDIA BlueField-3 data processing units (DPUs) per system streamline data handling to and from attached high-performance AI storage.
Supermicro Solutions Featuring NVIDIA Superchips
Supermicro also offers solutions for all NVIDIA GB200 Grace Blackwell Superchips, including the newly announced NVIDIA GB200 NVL4 Superchip and the NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 single-rack exascale computer.
Supermicro's lineup of NVIDIA MGX designs will support the NVIDIA GB200 Grace Blackwell NVL4 Superchip. This superchip unlocks converged HPC and AI, delivering performance through four NVIDIA NVLink-connected Blackwell GPUs unified with two NVIDIA Grace CPUs over NVLink-C2C. Compatible with Supermicro's liquid-cooled NVIDIA MGX modular systems, the Superchip provides performance for scientific computing, graph neural network (GNN) training, and inference applications over the prior generation.
The NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 SuperCluster with Supermicro liquid-cooling solution delivers an exascale supercomputer in a single rack with SuperCloud Composer (SCC) software, providing monitoring and management capability for liquid-cooled data centers. 72 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs and 36 NVIDIA Grace CPUs are all connected via fifth-generation NVIDIA NVLink and NVLink Switch, operating as a GPU with a pool of HBM3e memory, facilitating 130TB/s of total GPU communication bandwidth with low latency.
Accelerated Computing Systems
Supermicro's 5U PCIe accelerated computing systems are now available with NVIDIA H200 NVL, made for lower-power, air-cooled enterprise rack designs that require flexible configurations, delivering acceleration for many AI and HPC workloads regardless of size. With up to four GPUs connected by NVIDIA NVLink, a 1.5x memory capacity, and a 1.2x bandwidth increase with HBM3e, NVIDIA H200 NVL can fine-tune LLMs in a few hours, delivering faster LLM inference performance over the previous generation. NVIDIA H200 NVL also includes a 5-year subscription to NVIDIA AI Enterprise, a cloud-native software platform for developing and deploying production AI.
Supermicro's X14 and H14 5U PCIe accelerated computing systems support up to two 4-way NVIDIA H200 NVL systems through NVLink technology with a total of 8 GPUs in a system, providing up to 900GB/s GPU-to-GPU interconnection with a combined pool of 564GB of HBM3e memory per 4-GPU NVLink domain. The new PCIe accelerated computing system can support up to 10 PCIe GPUs and now also features the latest Intel Xeon 6 or AMD EPYC 9005 Series processors to deliver options for HPC and AI applications.
Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.
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