A Performance/Cost Evaluation for a GPU-Based Drug Discovery Application on Volunteer Computing
Autor/es
Guerrero, Ginés David; Imbernón Tudela, Baldomero; Pérez Sánchez, Horacio; Sanz, Francisco; García Carrasco, José Manuel; [et al.]Fecha
2014-06Disciplina/s
Ingeniería, Industria y ConstrucciónMateria/s
BINDSURFHPC
Volunteer computing
Bioinformatics
Resumen
Bioinformatics is an interdisciplinary research field that develops tools for the analysis of large biological databases, and, thus, the use of high performance computing (HPC) platforms is mandatory for the generation of useful biological knowledge. The latest generation of graphics processing units (GPUs) has democratized the use of HPC as they push desktop computers to cluster-level performance. Many applications within this field have been developed to leverage these powerful and low-cost architectures. However, these applications still need to scale to larger GPU-based systems to enable remarkable advances in the fields of healthcare, drug discovery, genome research, etc. The inclusion of GPUs in HPC systems exacerbates power and temperature issues, increasing the total cost of ownership (TCO). This paper explores the benefits of volunteer computing to scale bioinformatics applications as an alternative to own large GPU-based local infrastructures. We use as a benchmark a GPU-base...