FW: [Beowulf] Which distro for the cluster?
Cunningham, Dave
dave.cunningham at lmco.com
Thu Dec 28 12:12:16 PST 2006
I notice that Scyld is notable by it's absence from this discussion. Is
that due to cost, or bad/no experience, or other factors? There is a
lot of interest in it around my company lately.
Dave Cunningham
-----Original Message-----
From: beowulf-bounces at beowulf.org [mailto:beowulf-bounces at beowulf.org]
On Behalf Of Andrew M.A. Cater
Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2006 8:40 AM
To: beowulf at beowulf.org
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] Which distro for the cluster?
On Wed, Dec 27, 2006 at 06:46:25PM +0100, Chetoo Valux wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> As a Linux user I've worked with several distros as RedHat, SuSE,
Debian and
> derivatives, and recently Gentoo.
>
> Now I face the challenge of building a HPC for scientific
calculations, and
> I wonder which distro would suit me best. As a Gentoo user, I've
recognised
> the power of customisation, optimisation and lightweight system, for
> instance my 4 years old laptop flies like a youngster, and some
desktops
> too. So I thought about building the HPC nodes (8+1 master) with
Gentoo ....
>
Don't use Gentoo unless you've a full, fast connection to the internet
_AND_ you're prepared for your cluster to be internet connected while
you build it. This IMHO.
Scientific calculations: Quantian? Debian. Debian for the number of math
and other packages and the ease of install. Over 8 nodes, it should be
relatively easy to set up. But it depends what you want to do, what
other users want to do etc. etc.
> But then it comes the administration and maintenance burden, which for
me it
> should be the less, since my main task here is research ... so
browsing the
> net I found Rocks Linux with plenty of clustering docs and
administration
> tools & guidelines. I feel this should be the choice in my case, even
if I
> sacrifice some computation efficiency.
Rocks / Warewulf perhaps. If you just want something you can
build/update/maintain in your sleep, I'd still suggest Debian - if only
because a _minimal_ install on the nodes is as small as you want it to
be - and because it's fairly consistent. Your cluster - your choice but
you may have to justify it to your co-workers.
Andy
>
> Any advice on this will be appreciated.
>
> Chetoo.
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