The end goal- a data transfer node capable of taking a 100Gbps data stream and writing it to disk at line rate. Getting there was not as easy as originally planned. This talk briefly describes some of the speed bumps we encountered along the way.
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Kevin Hildebrand is the HPC Architect for the Division of IT at the University of Maryland. As the architect, Kevin is responsible for the design, construction, operation, and support of high-performance computing clusters.
Kevin has 27 years of experience in Unix systems administration, and 13 years of experience building five separate HPC clusters. The latest, Deepthought2, provided a significant leap in computational capacity to the university when it was deployed in May of 2014.
After graduating from the university with a bachelor's degree in Electrical
Engineering in 1991, Kevin has remained at Maryland with the exception
of a five year period from 2000-2005 where he worked for a small company
focused on bringing the internet to third world countries.
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