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Optimizing Engineering Cluster Performance at GE's Oil & Gas Business
Technology Category
- Sensors - Gas Sensors
- Sensors - Utility Meters
Applicable Industries
- Oil & Gas
- Transportation
Applicable Functions
- Logistics & Transportation
Use Cases
- Inventory Management
- Time Sensitive Networking
Services
- System Integration
The Challenge
GE's Oil & Gas business was facing a significant challenge in job scheduling for their applications. The gas turbine engineering group was upgrading its High-Performance Computing (HPC) resources, moving from an 8-CPU UNIX server to a 20-CPU HP ProLiant 380 cluster running Red Hat Linux. However, they encountered unexpected difficulties in job scheduling using open source code. The situation was becoming increasingly difficult to manage, causing delays in production. The group leader, Alessandro Ciani, was tasked with getting the cluster into production but was frustrated with the delays. The situation was urgent, and a solution was needed to ensure the system could be put into production.
About The Customer
Nuovo Pignone, now a key technological component of GE's Oil & Gas business, began life 100 years ago as a foundry. Today, more than 20,000 machines manufactured by this GE business are operated worldwide by major companies to keep petroleum products moving from oil rigs to storage facilities to refineries to distribution points. The engineering groups at GE's Oil & Gas Florence headquarters work extensively with commercial and proprietary CFD and CEA tools which are used to build and test product designs. The gas turbine engineering group designs gas turbines that are installed in the pipeline system or offshore for mechanical drive applications. Their customers are major petroleum companies like Shell and Texaco, with sites around the world.
The Solution
Altair, a global technology company providing solutions in product development, high-performance computing and data intelligence, was approached to provide a solution. Instead of a standard presentation, Altair suggested a pilot installation of their PBS Professional® workload management software. This integrated workload management solution was optimized for running the StarCD application. The GE engineering team was soon able to submit and manage its StarCD workload with confidence. Following the success of the pilot, GE's Oil & Gas business purchased PBS Professional licenses for all CPUs in the cluster and hired Altair to integrate their other applications into their PBS Professional cluster. The cluster was expanded by adding heterogeneous nodes, and all 90 processors in the cluster and the corresponding application licenses were efficiently managed with PBS Professional.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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