Beowulf Cluster Computing with Linux

William D. Gropp (Editor), Ewing Lusk (Editor), Thomas L. Sterling (Editor)

Research output: Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook

Abstract

Use of Beowulf clusters (collections of off-the-shelf commodity computers programmed to act in concert, resulting in supercomputer performance at a fraction of the cost) has spread far and wide in the computational science community. Many application groups are assembling and operating their own "private supercomputers" rather than relying on centralized computing centers. Such clusters are used in climate modeling, computational biology, astrophysics, and materials science, as well as non-traditional areas such as financial modeling and entertainment. Much of this new popularity can be attributed to the growth of the open-source movement.The second edition of Beowulf Cluster Computing with Linux has been completely updated; all three stand-alone sections have important new material. The introductory material in the first part now includes a new chapter giving an overview of the book and background on cluster-specific issues, including why and how to choose a cluster, as well as new chapters on cluster initialization systems (including ROCKS and OSCAR) and on network setup and tuning. The information on parallel programming in the second part now includes chapters on basic parallel programming and available libraries and programs for clusters. The third and largest part of the book, which describes software infrastructure and tools for managing cluster resources, has new material on cluster management and on the Scyld system.
Original languageEnglish (US)
Place of PublicationCambridge
PublisherMIT Press
Edition2
ISBN (Print)9780262692922
StatePublished - Nov 2003

Publication series

NameScientific and Engineering Computation

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Beowulf Cluster Computing with Linux'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this