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Encyclopedia > Alliant Computer Systems

Alliant Computer Systems was a computer company that designed and manufactured parallel computing systems. Together with Pyramid Technology and Sequent Computer Systems, Alliant's machines pioneered the symmetric multiprocessing market. One of the more successful companies in the group, over 650 Alliant systems were produced over their lifetime. Parallel computing is the simultaneous execution of the same task (split up and specially adapted) on multiple processors in order to obtain faster results. ... Pyramid Technology was a computer company that produced a number of RISC-based minicomputers at the upper-end of the performance range. ... Sequent Computer Systems, or more commonly just Sequent, was a computer company that designed and manufactured parallel computing systems. ... Symmetric Multiprocessing, or SMP, is a multiprocessor computer architecture where two or more identical processors are connected to a single shared main memory. ...


Alliant was founded, as Dataflow Systems, in May 1982 by Gruner, Mundie and McAndrew to produce machines for scientific and engineering users who needed smaller machines than offerings from Cray Computer and similar high-end vendors. Cray Computer Corporation was a spinoff of Cray Research intended to develop and market the Cray-3 supercomputer. ...


Alliant's first machines were announced in 1985, starting with the FX series. The FX series consisted of a number Computational Elements, or CEs, which included a set of Weitek 1064/1065 FPU's and several custom designed support chips to implement a vector processor based on it. These were augmented by the Interactive Processors, IPs, which were based on Motorola 68010's (and, subsequently, Motorola 68020's) with 4MB of local RAM, connecting everything together using a crossbar system. Like many early multiprocessing systems, the FX series ran an adapted version of BSD Unix on the IPs, known as Concentrix. Systems were named for the number of CEs inside, the FX/1, FX/4 and FX/8. Alliant machines were fairly small, the FX/1 was about the size of a large full-height PC, while the FX/8 was smaller than a VAX 11/750, about the size of a large photocopier. Speed was excellent, the FX/1 about 2.5 MIPS (as opposed to the 1 MIPS VAX 11/780), while the FX/8 was some 5 times faster. Weitek Corporation was a former chip-design company that originally concentrated on floating point units for a number of commercial CPU designs. ... A floating point unit (FPU) is a part of a CPU specially designed to carry out operations on floating point numbers. ... A vector processor, or array processor, is a CPU design that is able to run mathematical operations on a large number of data elements very quickly. ... The Motorola MC68010 processor is a 16/32-bit microprocessor from Motorola, made in the early 1980s. ... Motorola 68020 The Motorola 68020 is a microprocessor from Motorola. ... BSD redirects here; for other uses see BSD (disambiguation). ... VAX is a 32-bit computing architecture that supports an orthogonal instruction set (machine language) and virtual addressing (i. ... A small, much-used Xerox copier in a high school library. ...


A second series of FX machines, introduced in early 1988, replaced the CE with new custom hardware known as the Advanced Computational Element (ACE). The Weitek FPUs were replaced by a floating point chipset made by Bipolar Integrated Technology and a redesigned vector processor with 32 64-bit vector elements, 8 64-bit scalar floating point registers, 8 32-bit integer registers, and 8 32-bit address registers. The new vector processor increased vector processing speed while reducing board space allowing the ACE to return to the 18x18 inch profile used by the other system boards in the main chassis. These were used in the FX/40, FX/80 and VFX machines. Bipolar Integrated Technology was a semiconductor company based in Beaverton, Oregon which sold products implemented with ECL technology. ... A vector processor, or array processor, is a CPU design that is able to run mathematical operations on a large number of data elements very quickly. ...


In 1990, the FX/2800 series replaced the CE/ACEs and IPs with modules based on the Intel i860 RISC chip. The i860 was an early superscalar CPU that allowed the programmer access directly into the pipelines; with custom coding the 860 was a very fast system, making it perfect for supercomputer applications. In the new series the Super Computational Element (SCE) and Super Interactive Processor (SIP) both consisted of up to four i860s, up to seven of which could be interconnected on the crossbar. A fully-expanded FX/2800 could support 28 i860's in total. The Intel i860 (also 80860, and code named N10) was a RISC microprocessor from Intel, first released in 1989. ... Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC), is a microprocessor CPU design philosophy that favors a smaller and simpler set of instructions that all take about the same amount of time to execute. ... A superscalar CPU architecture implements a form of parallelism on a single chip, thereby allowing the system as a whole to run much faster than it would otherwise be able to at a given clock speed. ...


Also in 1990 Alliant purchased Raster Technologies, a provider of high-resolution graphics terminals and custom graphics cards for Sun Microsystems workstations. Their GX4000 product was a combination of PHIGS+ software and special graphical boards that could generate and display graphical vectors very fast. For 3D effects, a hardware Z-buffer was available. The Raster graphics technology was integrated with FX/40 and FX/80 machines to produce the VFX, Alliant's first fully integrated graphical minisupercomputer. The term graphics is the use of visual elements to inform and illustrate particular information in pictorial form of photographs, drawings, line art, graphs, diagrams, symbols, geometric designs, maps, engineering drawings, or other non-text images. ... A GeForce 4 4200-based graphics card A graphics card or video card is a component of a computer which is designed to convert a logical representation of an image stored in memory to a signal that can be used as input for a display medium, most often a monitor... Sun Microsystems is a computer, semiconductor and software manufacturer headquartered in Santa Clara, California, in Silicon Valley. ... PHIGS is an API standard for rendering 3D computer graphics, at one time considered to be the 3D graphics standard for the 1990s. ...


Alliant's final product series was the CAMPUS/800, a massively-parallel machine based on units similar to the FX/2800 known as ClusterNodes and sharing a total of up to 4GB of unified memory. Each ClusterNode was connected to up to 32 others with a intra-ClusterNode switch, with a latency of 1us and 1.12GB/s bandwidth. An inter-ClusterNode switch based on HIPPI was also available, with a latency of 30us and 2.56GB/s bandwidth. The largest CAMPUS system created included 192 ClusterNodes in total, and provided 4.7 GFLOPS. HIPPI (HIgh Performance Parallel Interface) is a computer bus for the attachment of high speed storage devices to supercomputers. ...


The CAMPUS/800 was first announced in 1991, but the company was hit by a series financial problems and went bankrupt in 1992. Various Alliant systems soldiered on in service for many years after that however, and were generally considered very reliable.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Alliant Computer Systems Corporation (1478 words)
Alliant Computer Systems, formerly known as Dataflow, was founded in May 1982 by Gruner, Mundie and McAndrew to fill the science and engineering market niche for small to medium sized parallel systems.
Alliant's first parallel machines were announced in 1985, and a number of subsequent models were based on custom designed processors including the FX/40 and FX/80 shared memory multiprocessors, which were superceded at the end of the 1980's by the FX/2800 so-called "standards based supercomputer", which was based on Intel i860 microprocessors.
Alliant's customers include Asahi Chemical Corp, AT\andT, Boeing Airplane Co., Ford Motor Co., Hughes Aircraft Corp., Motorola Inc., Siemens, The Whittle Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, CERFACS at Toulouse, and the Jodrell Bank Observatory at the University of Manchester.
Alliant pins hopes on new i860-based MPP - Alliant Computer Systems Corp.'s Campus/800 massively parallel processor - ... (918 words)
Alliant is likely to have a significant headstart in the MPP market over Convex, which isn't expected to introduce such as system for another two years or more.
The Alliant MPP system, which first came to light two months ago (EN, Sept. 30), uses the FX/2800 as a building block, but only supports 25 processors in each cabinet due to the need to use one backplane slot for a 2.56GB per second memory interconnect that links it with other modules.
Alliant has shipped pieces of the Campus/800 to the Argonne National Laboratory and a French aerospace research agency, but is still working on the memory interconnect's protocols and the porting of outside software needed to support the module-to-module memory linkages.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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