The US government is auctioning the Cheyenne supercomputer: 145,152 CPU cores and 313 TB of RAM

Shawn Knight

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TL;DR: It's not every day that one gets the chance to purchase a world-class supercomputer, but that's exactly the opportunity afforded to bidders. GSA Auctions, a government surplus auction operator, is accepting bids for the Cheyenne supercomputer. The machine was constructed by Silicon Graphics (SGI). It is an SGI ICE XA system consisting of 4,032 dual-socket units configured as quad-node blades.

Cheyenne is driven by 8,064 Intel Xeon E5-2697v4 processors. Each Broadwell-class chip is built on a 14nm process and features 18 cores / 36 threads with a base frequency of 2.3 GHz that can Turbo Boost up to 3.6 GHz. In total, that works out to a staggering 145,152 processing cores.

The system utilizes DDR4-2400 ECC single-rank memory, and lots of it. In total, the new owner will get a machine with 313,344 GB of memory.

The auction listing mentions 14 E-Cell units, each weighing 1,500 pounds. Also referenced are 28 E-Rack units, all of which are watercooled. Notably, fiber optic and CAT5/6 cabling is excluded from the auction, so you'll need to supply your own.

Bidding started on April 26 with the auction scheduled to end on May 3 shortly after 6 p.m. Central Time. As of this writing (with less than three days remaining), 13 bids have been placed, and the current high bid sits at $28,085. Of note is the fact that the reserve has not yet been met.

Cheyenne went to work in January 2017 and was taken offline at the end of last year. At one time, it was ranked as the 20th fastest supercomputer in the world. As of last November, the Top500 list ranked it at number 160.

Interested parties should read through the full auction listing before submitting a bid. The machine is offered as-is in its current condition, and is experiencing "maintenance limitations" due to some faulty quick disconnects. What's more, about one percent of nodes experienced failure during the supercomputer's last six months of operation, which are mostly attributed to DIMMs with ECC errors.

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I'd love it, but that means I have to park all the cars outside and rewire the pole barn .....
 
What will likely happen is that this will be bought by a reseller and parted out. This is how cheap server parts make it to market. If you find a reseller and you're looking to buy stuff for a home lab it's pretty easy to send them an email saying "I want to buy 10 at half price". They'll usually shoot back asking for 70-80%. Keep in mind, this stuff is usually priced at 70% off MSRP on the used market already. The tip of the line used stuff holds its value decently well but, go one or two tiers down and you can get some pretty awesome deals.

I'd love it, but that means I have to park all the cars outside and rewire the pole barn .....
You better have a whole bunch of hamster wheels turning to power this thing.
 
The RAM would be nice - plenty of builds can still use that... but hard to justify thousands... alas, not for me :)

But as yRaz said, some reseller will buy this and sell the parts... guess I'll wait a few months and hope to see lots of DDR4 ECC ram selling for cheap :)
 
The RAM would be nice - plenty of builds can still use that... but hard to justify thousands... alas, not for me :)

But as yRaz said, some reseller will buy this and sell the parts... guess I'll wait a few months and hope to see lots of DDR4 ECC ram selling for cheap :)
These being watercooled will probably make it difficult to resell as a whole unit. To be perfectly fair, though, it wouldn't be hard to connect a waterpump and a car radiator up to one or five if those watercooled racks and it would be cheaper than buying server specific cooling hardware.
 
These being watercooled will probably make it difficult to resell as a whole unit. To be perfectly fair, though, it wouldn't be hard to connect a waterpump and a car radiator up to one or five if those watercooled racks and it would be cheaper than buying server specific cooling hardware.
The racks are water cooled... didn't think of the RAM also being watercooled... rats... oh well, one can still dream!
 
The racks are water cooled... didn't think of the RAM also being watercooled... rats... oh well, one can still dream!
I'm serious when I say it's cheaper to use a car radiator and a water pump. For a rack like that you're looking at cooling atleast 3000 watts. You can get a radiator, some copper pipe, a water pump and some solder for under $500. Put a $20box fan on the radiator instead of a $200 car fan.
 
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