Apocrita is a 350 node heterogeneous HPC Cluster running Centos 7 Linux managed by ITS Research at Queen Mary University of London, located in the Jisc Shared data centre in Slough.
The Apocrita system has been specifically designed to meet the needs of a wide variety of research in the areas of our three faculties: Humanities and Social Sciences, Science and Engineering, and Medicine and Dentistry.
For more information, please see the Apocrita docs site: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk
Using an HPC cluster can substantially reduce the time taken to compute problems by running analyses in parallel or breaking them up into pieces. Both strategies allow for the problem to be worked on by many separate compute cores (CPUs) at the same time.
You need to request an account here: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/intro/hpc-account/.
You can raise a ticket with ITS Research Support who will be able to reset it for you.
You can email them here: its-research-support@qmul.ac.uk
Documentation for Apocrita can be found here: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/using/.
You can also visit our Guided Tutorials and Introduction to Linux pages: learn.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/
Please note: you will need your Apocrita username and password to access the Tutorials.
Yes. If you have an @qmul.ac.uk or @se18.qmul.ac.uk email address, you can create an account.
The HPC Slack Channel can be found here: #hpc
To prevent duplication of data and to save valuable research time we provide a local copy of some widely used public datasets.
You can see the available datasets here: https://docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/storage/datasets/
If you require any datasets that are not currently available, please contact us: its-research-support@qmul.ac.uk
For more information on available node, please see the Apocrita docs site: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/nodes/
First, check to see if we have a suitable node on Apocrita that meets your requirements. Try running various jobs on the node to see how the node performs for your particular analysis.
You can see the available node here: https://docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/nodes/
Use of Apocrita is free, but it is a shared service. If a research project is going to make intensive use of the cluster then we request that you add compute capacity as part of your grant application.
We can help you purchase a node for your research, please contact the ITS Research Consultants: its-research-consultants@qmul.ac.uk
We have access to several Tier 2 clusters which are among the TOP500 list of the world's most powerful computer systems. If you are running multi-node parallel jobs you may benefit from access to these. Tier 2 HPC facilities include:
QMUL Academics may apply to use a cluster free of charge if they meet certain criteria.
For more information please see the Tier 2 pages: https://docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/tier2/
Published research should reference this facility using the following text:
This research utilised Queen Mary's Apocrita HPC facility, supported by QMUL Research-IT. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.438045
First check to see if we have the software you require, you can see the available applications here: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/apps/.
If it is not available then you can request the software to be installed here: docs.hpc.qmul.ac.uk/apps/requesting/