1U P4 Systems
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John P. Quintana jpq at northwestern.eduWed May 23 06:12:33 PDT 2001
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> hi william > > if you dont mind the "open frame design"... > like at clusterCompute... > > - keep in mind.. one can get a flat sheet of > metal and mount all the motherboard, disk, powersupply > onto a piece of sheetmetal .... to create a custom > very affordable/inexpensive 1U server rack > > - it has better airflow due to the huge fans > in the cabinet.... > > > > > than you can easily mount 4 independent server into one 1U cabinet > shelf .... 160 1U servers in one cabinet > - <shameless plug> we can fit 3 independent server per shelf</shamelessplug> > > and, you can also do that the kingstar way...http://www.KingStarUSA.com > ( they are 2U servers... p3 slot-1 CPU vs the flat cpu ( socket370 )... > >have fun >alvin > http://www.Linux-1U.net -- 500Gb 1U Raid5 ... I have been in touch with the guys at clustercompute.com and they are very happy with their system. In particular, I was worried about ground loops since they are using metal rods to hold everything together. We have been thinking about doing something similar. If you look at our current cluster http://www.dnd.aps.anl.gov/wulffnet/ you will see that we have had to put our cluster in a linear fashion across on a "big shelf". This is due to space restrictions and if we had to do it all over again, we wouldn't. The cabling issues get to be a real hassle since you are now dealing with a lot of 50 foot CAT 5, KVM switch cable etc... Our cluster is becoming rather popular to the point that it is hard for us to shut it off or to do development work since it is being used. So, I am planning on building another cluster (this time directly on our network so all Linux boxes can send jobs to it via PBS. Most of what we do is trivially parallyzable). This would be for quick (i.e. 10 minute or less) type jobs and for me to steal when I need to do something :). I think clustercompute really has a compact design for COTS hardware. No sheet metal between motherboards means that you can pack more boards together. The location of the powersupplies makes sense and what they really have is a 10 cpu module that can be replicated. In addition to being custom, the kingstarusa.com boards still has a sheet metal rack between motherboards which limits their density. In clustercomputes design they are limited by the headspace that they want above their cooling fan. Being inspired by clustercompute.com, and also a WWW site that I ran across a home based cluster a while ago (but can't find now) which showed the motherboards in a vertical configuration and held in place by plastic rails, we were going to try and put together a system like http://www.clustercompute.com but with rails holding the motherboards in a vertical position. 6" ATX power extenders are available so that we can disconnect the motherboard in place. Rather than gluing floppies to the motherboard, we already purchased Linksys cards from http://www.disklessworkstations.com with etherboot ROMS and we already use the Wake-On-Lan feature in our current cluster to turn the nodes on. (I also have a handfull of 4 MByte IDE Flash disks that could be used). So... if we are lucky, we won't have to build the box with the buttons and LEDS that clustercompute did (which was apparently a pain to build). I have been able to find ATX switches on the WWW for about $3.00 but there is a packaging issue. If I had to go this route, I might just buy a commercial Digital I/O board and place it in a "master node" to turn everything on and off and also do the monitoring. In some sense I agree with the arguments about overpriced racks. If we don't rackmount , we will probably use the Al extrusions and panels from http://www.8020.net. We have worked with their stuff in the past and while it isn't cheap, it does the job. We might need to use PCI riser cards to pack the ethernet cards closer, but we will try it without first if we decide to go this route. I haven't really seen this approach to much in building clusters so I was wondering if there were any good or bad comments people might have before we go buy a lot of stuff. Cheers, John -- John P.G. Quintana jpq at northwestern.edu Northwestern University Phone: 630-252-0221 DND-CAT FAX: 630-252-0226 Building 432/A008 http://www.dnd.aps.anl.gov 9700 South Cass Avenue Argonne, IL 60439
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