| Overview
To the outside world, a "supercomputer" appears to be a single
system. In fact, it's a cluster of computers that share a local
area network and have the ability to work together on a single
problem as a team. Many businesses used to consider supercomputing
beyond the reach of their budgets, but new Linux applications have
made high-performance clusters more affordable than ever. These
days, the promise of low-cost supercomputing is one of the main
reasons many businesses choose Linux over other operating systems.
This new guide covers everything a newcomer to clustering will need
to plan, build, and deploy a high-performance Linux cluster. The
book focuses on clustering for high-performance computation,
although much of its information also applies to clustering for
high-availability (failover and disaster recovery). The book
discusses the key tools you'll need to get started, including good
practices to use while exploring the tools and growing a system.
You'll learn about planning, hardware choices, bulk installation of
Linux on multiple systems, and other basic considerations. Then,
you'll learn about software options that can save you hours--or
even weeks--of deployment time. Since a wide variety of options
exist in each area of clustering software, the author discusses the
pros and cons of the major free software projects and chooses those
that are most likely to be helpful to new cluster administrators
and programmers. A few of the projects introduced in the book
include:
MPI, the most popular programming library for clusters. This
book offers simple but realistic introductory examples along with
some pointers for advanced use. OSCAR and Rocks, two comprehensive installation and
administrative systems openMosix (a convenient tool for distributing jobs), Linux
kernel extensions that migrate processes transparently for load
balancing PVFS, one of the parallel filesystems that make clustering I/O
easier C3, a set of commands for administering multiple systems
Ganglia, OpenPBS, and cloning tools (Kickstart, SIS and G4U) are
also covered. The book looks at cluster installation packages
(OSCAR & Rocks) and then considers the core packages
individually for greater depth or for folks wishing to do a custom
installation. Guidelines for debugging, profiling, performance
tuning, and managing jobs from multiple users round out this
immensely useful book.
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionTo the outside world, a "supercomputer" appears to be a single system. In fact, it's a cluster of computers that share a local area network and have the ability to work together on a single problem as a team. Many businesses used to consider supercomputing beyond the reach of their budgets, but new Linux applications have made high-performance clusters more affordable than ever. These days, the promise of low-cost supercomputing is one of the main reasons many businesses choose Linux over other operating systems. This new guide covers everything a newcomer to clustering will need to plan, build, and deploy a high-performance Linux cluster. The book focuses on clustering for high-performance computation, although much of its information also applies to clustering for high-availability (failover and disaster recovery). The book discusses the key tools you'll need to get started, including good practices to use while exploring the tools and growing a system. You'll learn about planning, hardware choices, bulk installation of Linux on multiple systems, and other basic considerations. Then, you'll learn about software options that can save you hours--or even weeks--of deployment time. Since a wide variety of options exist in each area of clustering software, the author discusses the pros and cons of the major free software projects and chooses those that are most likely to be helpful to new cluster administrators and programmers. A few of the projects introduced in the book include: - MPI, the most popular programming library for clusters. This book offers simple but realistic introductory examples along with some pointers for advanced use.
- OSCAR and Rocks, two comprehensive installation and administrative systems
- openMosix (a convenient tool for distributing jobs), Linux kernel extensions that migrate processes transparently for load balancing
- PVFS, one of the parallel filesystems that make clustering I/O easier
- C3, a set of commands for administering multiple systems
Ganglia, OpenPBS, and cloning tools (Kickstart, SIS and G4U) are also covered. The book looks at cluster installation packages (OSCAR & Rocks) and then considers the core packages individually for greater depth or for folks wishing to do a custom installation. Guidelines for debugging, profiling, performance tuning, and managing jobs from multiple users round out this immensely useful book. |
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Reader Reviews From Amazon (Ranked by 'Helpfulness') Average Customer Rating: based on 1 reviews. OSCAR info badly out of date, 2005-09-20 Reviewer rating: I recently installed an OSCAR cluster on our PowerEdge SC1425 servers; Since the book just came out this year, I thought it would provide some more up to date insights into items that are not included in the install manual.
No such luck, you will find no mention of the need to upgrade SIS if you have SCSI or S-ATA drives, there is no information on Peter Mueller's kernel, or why you may need it. Or why the whole process seems to work but the nodes never can boot (OSCAR sometimes makes a bad initrd.img - check the size).
This book is NOT a good OSCAR resource, if you're a newbie it just leave you feeling frustrated as to why it sounds so simple and just doesn't work.
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