Various file systems are provided for storing the data, which differ in terms of the intended usage scenarios.
A highly available GPFS-based storage system from DDN offers a capacity of approx. 4 PiByte and a bandwidth of 80 Gigabyte/s (read and write) and is available as $HOME. The file system supports snapshots for standalone recovery of data after mishandling. This file system is also supported by a disaster-proof backup, which strictly limits the capacity granted to users. The same file system technology without this backup is available with larger grantable capacity as $WORK.
A high-performance Lustre-based storage system from DDN based on Exascaler5 technology provides 26 petabytes of capacity and 500 gigabytes/s of read/write bandwidth and is available as $HPCWORK. The capacity granted to users can be in the petabyte range.
An ad-hoc file system based on BeeGFS technology aggregates the free capacities of the SSDs in the computing nodes for the duration of a computing job. Approximately 400 GiB are available per participating compute node. This file system offers maximum metadata performance at high bandwidth (comparable to $HPCWORK) and also supports the storage of a very high number of small files, especially for AI applications, and is available as $BEEOND.