[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: Help in setting up a cluster



Hi,
I recommend you to try pelicanhpc http://pareto.uab.es/mcreel/PelicanHPC/ it does not need installation, it can boot from live disk and make remote nodes boot from network. Its a very practical  way to see how a cluster look like and to try some mpi coding.(also based on debian)

Yetkin Ozturk

21 Şubat 2013 Perşembe tarihinde Geoffrey Jacobs <gdjacobs@gmail.com> adlı kullanıcı şöyle yazdı:
> On 02/20/2013 03:37 PM, Gerald Wrong wrote:
>
> Look into Mosix for simple heterogenous clustering of linux boxes, but you have to comfortable rolling your own kernels unless somethings changed. 燣ast time I was a student, you could get Mosix for free as a student.
>
> The webserver failover is a slightly different topic from distributed/cluster computing IMO. 燨ne easy thing to do would be to make an image whereby every machine had the same webserver and content, and use some kind of load balancing/redirection.
>
> Good Luck!
>
> On Wed, Feb 20, 2013 at 3:58 PM, Anatoly Molchanov <ykdosto@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Do you want use beowulf? Or you interested in clustered web-server issue?
>>
>>
>> 2013/2/21 Yazeed Alsaif <saifyazeed@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> Hello, 
>>>
>>> This is my first time posting here, I think I am in the right place, if not I am sorry. 
>>>
>>> um, Here is my situation. 
>>> I am in middle of my final year project (Undergrad), anyway my project is on Linux Clustering and I am asked to demonstrate the effectiveness of a cluster practically, I have done my thesis but I am stuck on the practical side. 
>>> what I want and looking for is: 
>>>
>>> 1- I want to test the cluster by running a software that can take advantage of other machines resources and converting songs from one extension to another in a short time, and then I will compare that to if the conversion process was run on one machine. 
>>>
>>> 2- I want to run a web server爋n the cluster, so if one machine fails, the website will still be there. (for fault tolerance demonstration) 
>>>
>>> Note: I do NOT燼nyone to do it for me, I want to do it myself. All I want is guidelines and perhaps some best practices. 
>>> thanks guys. 
>>>
>>> Yazeed.
>
> Mosix is pretty much dead now, IIRC. You could try Kerrighed or OpenSSI.
>
Reply to: