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M3

15 May 2026 - All debugging disabled

For operational reasons, we have made the decision to disable all debugging on M3 till further notice. Tools such as gdb, strace and VSCode debugging will not function. More information will be provided as it becomes available.

Welcome to the M3 user documentation

You can explore all of our pages in the left sidebar. If you don't see this sidebar, click on the the triple bar ≡ in the top-left to reveal the sidebar.

What is M3?

M3 is a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster (formerly known as MASSIVE). M3 allows researchers to process large amounts of complex data by parallelising their workloads across many computers. Since 2010, MASSIVE has played a key role in driving discoveries across many disciplines including biomedical sciences, materials research, engineering and geosciences.

What hardware does M3 have?

M3 is made up of a large number of (mostly Intel) CPUs and NVIDIA GPUs connected by fast Mellanox (NVIDIA) RDMA over Converged Ethernet. The CPUs are quite powerful on their own, but M3's real benefit is that your workload can be split across many CPUs at once, allowing parallel workloads to be executed much more quickly.

Is M3 right for me?

If you are a Monash researcher who needs to process large amounts of data more quickly than is possible on your own computer, then M3 can speed up your work. If you only have a relatively light workload, particularly one that does not rely on GPUs, then Monash PhD students can apply for a PEACH project which gives you access a small partition of M3 that may be more suitable for you.

How can I use M3?

If you're interested in using M3, please see our Getting Started guide. Your usage of M3 is subject to the MASSIVE Terms of Use.