arcc.uwyo.edu
About Us | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/content/about-us
The Advanced Research Computing Center (ARCC) is the primary research computing facility for the University of Wyoming. In addition to providing a centralized scientific computing resource, ARCC is also a gateway to other research institutions within Wyoming and across the nation. ARCC hosts the central condominium style cluster, Mount Moran, as well as several specialized satellite clusters. We offer the services of these clusters to research efforts on campus. NCAR Wyoming Super Computer.
arcc.uwyo.edu
ARCC Policies | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/content/arcc-policies
These policies and procedures are intended to ensure that ARCC HPC facilities are fairly shared, effectively used, and support the University of Wyoming’s research programs that rely on computational facilities not available elsewhere at the University. Cluster: a assembly of computational hardware designed and configured to function together as a single system, much the way neurons work together to form a brain. Customer: a person, or group to whom ARCC provides a service. NCAR Wyoming Super Computer.
arcc.uwyo.edu
UW Science DMZ | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/guides/uw-science-dmz
Welcome to the UW Science DMZ. Access to the UW Science Network (UWSN) is governed by the UW Science Network Steering Committee. The Principal Investigator (PI) of a research group which has been granted access to the UWSN is required to submit an annual short (1/2 page) report to the Steering Committee discussing the research, accomplishments and how access to the UWSN has been beneficial to achieving research goals and milestones. And fill out the UWSN-Application. NCAR Wyoming Super Computer.
arcc.uwyo.edu
ARCC Wiki | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/wiki/arcc-wiki
This portion of the ARCC site is intended as an area for researchers and students to discuss research computing. Please post and help moderate content. UW Research computing environment. The ARCC maintains a general purpose, high performance computer cluster for research computing (named Mt. Moran. Mtmoran.uwyo.edu). All UW researchers can have an account on the computer and requests for accounts. The ARCC also maintains storage hardware for researchers. This includes a system called Bighorn.
arcc.uwyo.edu
ARCC FAC | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/content/arcc-fac
The ARCC Faculty Advisory Committee (ARCC-FAC) meets quarterly to advise the ARCC on operations and strategic decisions regarding ARCC facilities, policy, and upgrades. The next FAC meeting will be held Summer 2015. Minutes from previous meetings are available by clicking on the meeting date:. July 29, 2015. April 16, 2015. The current members of the Faculty Advisory Committee are:. Assistant Professor of Petroleum Engineering. Associate Professor, Evolutionary Genetics. Professor of Civil Engineering.
arcc.uwyo.edu
Mount Moran | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/guides/mount-moran
Mount Moran is an. System X cluster that is designed to be a general UW facility with the following characteristics:. Versatile, flexible, adaptable. The infrastructure hardware (racks, network, cooling, power, etc.) is intended to meet the needs of the entire cluster as it grows over time. These elements were designed to give the cluster as much capacity for growth as possible. Mount Moran currently has 34 nodes with GPU's. The GPU nodes support 2 nVidia K20 or K20x GPU's each. Guide to Mount Moran.
arcc.uwyo.edu
petaLibrary | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/guides/petalibrary
The UW Libraries and UW/IT have collaborated on a shared digital data repository designed provide two main functions: 1) a storage service for UW researchers who need to reliably store and exchange data with students, and collaborators anywhere in the world and; 2) a place for UW researchers to store data linked to publications, or datasets as publications themselves, and be in compliance with funder requirements. Is led by the UW/IT/Research Support group and is divided into two functional areas:. We an...
arcc.uwyo.edu
Getting a Yellowstone (NWSC/NCAR) Allocation | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/content/getting-yellowstone-nwscncar-allocation
Getting a Yellowstone (NWSC/NCAR) Allocation. The collaboration between NCAR and the University of Wyoming makes a significant portion of the NCAR/Wyoming Supercomputer ( NWSC. Available to Wyoming led projects. Researchers can gain access to these resources by submitting an allocation request. There are two general types of allocations: small start-up or educational allocations, and large computing allocations. Some question/answer shortcuts to get you started:. For a University allocation. Describe the...
arcc.uwyo.edu
Advanced Research Computing Center |
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/content/home
Welcome to the Advanced Research Computing Center, a division of IT/Research Services in UWIT. The ARCC's primary mission is to facilitate the research of UW faculty, researchers, staff and students by integrating compute resources (software and hardware), networking, data storage, information management, and human resources in an approachable and adaptable manner. These resources are supported on a best effort basis by the ARCC staff with the following service availability targets:. Tuesday February 14,...
arcc.uwyo.edu
Getting Started | Advanced Research Computing Center
https://arcc.uwyo.edu/guides/getting-started
If you are new to high performance computing (HPC), we have some resources to help you get access and use High Performance Computing resources at the Advanced Research Computing Center (ARCC). If you are experienced with HPC and looking to get started at University of Wyoming, you can jump directly to the Getting Connected pages. Consists of a set of interconnected computers. That work together so that they can be viewed as a single system; a super computer. High Performance Storage (HPS) systems are fas...