• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Red Hat Powers the Future of Supercomputing with Red Hat Enterprise Linux

July 2, 2020 By admin Leave a Comment

Red Hat, Inc., the world’s leading provider of open source solutions, today announced that Red Hat Enterprise Linux provides the operating system backbone for the top three supercomputers in the world and four out of the top 10, according to the newest TOP500 ranking. Already serving as a catalyst for enterprise innovation across the hybrid cloud, these rankings also show that the world’s leading enterprise Linux platform can deliver a foundation to meet even the most demanding computing environments.

In the top ten of the current TOP500 list, Red Hat Enterprise Linux serves as the operating system for:

Fugaku, the top-ranked supercomputer in the world based at RIKEN Center for Computational Sciences in Kobe, Japan.
Summit, the number two-ranked supercomputer based at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Sierra, the third-ranked supercomputer globally based at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California.
Marconi-100, the ninth-ranked supercomputer installed at CINECA research center in Italy.

High-performance computing across architectures

Red Hat Enterprise Linux is engineered to deliver a consistent, standardized and high-performance experience across nearly any certified architecture and hardware configuration. These same exacting standards and consistency are also brought to supercomputing environments, providing a predictable and reliable interface regardless of the underlying hardware.

Fugaku is the first Arm-based system to take first place on the TOP500 list, highlighting Red Hat’s commitment to the Arm ecosystem from the datacenter to the high-performance computing laboratory. Sierra, Summit and Marconi-100 all boast IBM POWER9-based infrastructure with NVIDIA GPUs; combined, these four systems produce more than 680 petaflops of processing power to fuel a broad range of scientific research applications.

In addition to enabling this immense computation power, Red Hat Enterprise Linux also underpins six out of the top 10 most power-efficient supercomputers on the planet according to the Green500 list. Systems on the list are measured in terms of both performance results and the power consumed achieving those. When it comes to sustainable supercomputing the premium is put on finding a balanced approach for the most energy-efficient performance.

In the top ten of the Green500 list, Red Hat Enterprise Linux serves as the operating system for:

A64FX prototype, at number four, was created as the prototype system to test and develop the Fugaku supercomputer and is based at Fujitsu’s plant in Numazu, Japan.
AIMOS, the number five supercomputer on the Green500 list based at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York.
Satori, the seventh-ranked most power-efficient system in the world, installed at MIT Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center (MGHPCC) in Holyoke, Massachusetts. It serves as the home for the Mass Open Cloud (MOC) project, where Red Hat supports a number of activities.
Summit at number eight.
Fugaku at number nine.
Marconi-100 at number ten.

From the laboratory to the datacenter and beyond

Modern supercomputers are no longer purpose-built monoliths constructed from expensive bespoke components. Each supercomputer deployment powered by Red Hat Enterprise Linux uses hardware that can be purchased and integrated into any datacenter, making it feasible for organizations to use enterprise systems that are similar to those breaking scientific barriers. Regardless of the underlying hardware, Red Hat Enterprise Linux provides the common control plane for supercomputers to be run, managed and maintained in the same manner as traditional IT systems.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux also opens supercomputing applications up to advancements in enterprise IT, including Linux containers. Working closely in open source communities with organizations like the Supercomputing Containers project, Red Hat is helping to drive advancements to make Podman, Skopeo and Buildah, components of Red Hat’s distributed container toolkit, more accessible for building and deploying containerized supercomputing applications.

Supporting Quote

Stefanie Chiras, vice president and general manager, Red Hat Enterprise Linux Business Unit, Red Hat

“Supercomputing is no longer the domain of custom-built hardware and software. With the proliferation of Linux across architectures, high-performance computing has now become about delivering scalable computational power to fuel scientific breakthroughs. Red Hat Enterprise Linux already provides the foundation for innovation to the enterprise world and, with the recent results of the TOP500 list, we’re pleased to now provide this same accessible, flexible and open platform to the world’s fastest and some of the most power-efficient computers.”

Steve Conway, senior adviser, HPC Market Dynamics, Hyperion Research

“Every one of the world’s TOP500 most powerful supercomputers runs on Linux, and a recent study we did confirmed that Red Hat is the most popular vendor-supported Linux solution in the global high performance computing market. Red Hat Enterprise Linux is designed to run seamlessly on a variety of architectures underlying leading supercomputers, playing an important part in driving HPC into new markets and use cases, including AI, enterprise computing, quantum computing and cloud computing.”

Satoshi Matsuoka, director, RIKEN Center for Computational Science (R-CCS); professor, Department of Mathematical and Computing Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology

“Fugaku represents a new wave of supercomputing, delivering the performance, scale and efficiency to help create new scientific breakthroughs and further drive research innovation. A key consideration of the project was to deliver an open source software stack, starting with the addition of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. With Red Hat Enterprise Linux running on Arm-based processors, we have been able to make supercomputing resources accessible and manageable by our distributed community of scientists and simplify development and deployment of a broader range of workloads and applications.”

Professor Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and the University of Manchester

“Computing innovation and scientific advancement is not done in a vacuum – the supercomputing community, from laboratories to the vendor ecosystem, collaborates to help drive breakthroughs at both the architectural and the research level. Red Hat is a key part of this global community, helping to deliver a standards-based, open control plane that can make all of this processing power accessible and usable to an extensive range of scientists across disciplines.”

Source: Red Hat, Inc.

Filed Under: Tech

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • Nscale’s $2 Billion Bet on the Physical Backbone of the AI Economy
  • Why USB-C Charging on the MacBook Neo Raises Questions About Port Durability
  • MagSafe Wireless Charging: The Magnetic Reinvention of Power
  • Apple Unveils MacBook Neo: A $599 Entry Into the Mac Ecosystem
  • Apple Unveils M5 Pro and M5 Max: A New Era for MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, and Studio Display
  • Apple iPhone 17e: Performance, Practicality, and a Smarter Entry Point into the iPhone 17 Family
  • Apple iPad Air M4 Arrives With 12GB Memory, Wi-Fi 7, and a Serious AI Push
  • Ericsson and Intel Are Redefining What 6G Is Actually For
  • Hollow-Core Fibre, Light Running Through Air Instead of Glass
  • Revel Raises $150M to Modernize the Software Backbone of Mission-Critical Hardware

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Memory Crunch: Why Prices Are Surging and Why Making More Memory Isn’t Easy
The End of Accounting as We Knew It
The Era of Superhuman Logistics Has Arrived: Building the First Autonomous Freight Network
Why Nvidia Shares Jumped on Meta, and Why the Market Cared
Accrual Launches With $75M to Push AI-Native Automation Into Core Accounting Workflows
Europe’s Digital Sovereignty Moment, or How Regulation Became a Competitive Handicap
Palantir Q4 2025: From Earnings Beat to Model Re-Rating
Baseten Raises $300M to Dominate the Inference Layer of AI, Valued at $5B
Nvidia’s China Problem Is Self-Inflicted, and Washington Should Stop Pretending Otherwise
USPS and the Theater of Control: How Government Freezes Failure in Place
Day Zero Threat Research Summit, August 30 – September 1, 2026, Las Vegas
CrowdStrike Returns to Profit as Revenue Climbs to $1.31 Billion in Q4
Cloudflare 2026 Threat Report Signals the Automation of Cyberwar
Fal.Con Gov 2026, March 18, Washington, D.C.
Huper Corporation Raises $1.5M Pre-Seed to Build a Security-First AI Chief of Staff
CyberBay Summit 2026, March 11–13, Tampa, Florida
Zscaler’s Q2 Beat and the Market’s Reluctance to Celebrate
AI as the New Insider: Why Trust, Not Code, Is Now the Weakest Link
Cybersecurity Meets Corporate Travel: Darktrace Chooses AI-Driven Navan to Power Global Mobility
Black Hat Asia 2026, April 21–24, Singapore

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
The Rise of Faceless Creators: Picsart Launches Persona and Storyline for AI Character-Driven Content
Apple TV Arrives on The Roku Channel, Expanding the Streaming Platform Wars
Why Attraction-Grabbing Stations Win at Tech Events
Why Nvidia Let Go of Arm, and Why It Matters Now
When the Market Wants a Story, Not Numbers: Rethinking AMD’s Q4 Selloff
BBC and the Gaza War: How Disproportionate Attention Reshapes Reality
Parallel Museums: Why the Future of Art Might Be Copies, Not Originals
ClickHouse Series D, The $400M Bet That Data Infrastructure, Not Models, Will Decide the AI Era
AI Productivity Paradox: When Speed Eats Its Own Gain
Voice AI as Infrastructure: How Deepgram Signals a New Media Market Segment
COMPUTEX 2026, June 2–5, Taipei
360° Mobility Mega Shows 2026, April 14–17, Taipei
Forrester CX Summit Series 2026: Amsterdam, New York, San Francisco
IAMPHENOM 2026, March 10–12, Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia
Billington State and Local CyberSecurity Summit, March 9–11, 2026, Washington, D.C.
Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2026 – 2–5 March, Barcelona, Spain
The AI Summit London, 10–11 June 2026, Tobacco Dock, London
aim10x Digital 2026, March 18, Virtual
Harvard Business Review Strategy Summit, February 26, 2026, Virtual
International Compact Modeling Conference, July 30–31, 2026, Long Beach, California

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains, Photography