On Thu, 8 Nov 2007, Jim Lux wrote:
At 01:03 PM 11/8/2007, andrew holway wrote:
Im still not convinced, bang for buck your going to get more
clustering this junk than buying commodity hardware. Benchmarks at the
ready.
Andy
No question there..
However, if you want a low capital investment toy cluster to learn on, the
$200 node is quite attractive.
For instance, say you had a class of 10 people wanting to learn about cluster
design and admin. You could go and get a big cluster and install the
necessary management tools to let them share the cluster, or use an already
existing cluster. OTOH, you could also buy 10 $2K clusters, and let them
have at it on their very own. They'll learn all the things about cluster
admining, rebuilding images, etc.
Now THIS I completely agree with. Nor is it a crazy situation -- I help
(indeed, am actively helping) high school students with cluster designs
for their high school project(s), and while they usually end up using
recycled old heterogeneous junk at least at first, there would be a real
benefit to putting together a small pile of brand new systems.
However, multicores are starting to redefine the optimum even here.
When one can get a dual core system for $400 (with a higher clock and a
64 bit CPU) then getting two BOXES at $200 each is still not horribly
attractive compared to getting one BOX at $400 that is probably close to
twice the aggregate flops. So instead of getting 8 boxes for $1600 +
$250-400 for a monitor, KVM, cables, switch, and shelving you get only 4
boxes (but have 10x the network bandwidth per box and actually win
tremendously on scalability) for your eight processors. You are
"forced" to learn about scalability of tasks across an inhomogeneous IPC
landscape quite early, but that isn't necessarily a bad thing...
rgb
For this kind of thing, raw performance isn't important, number of nodes is,
because there's a qualitative difference between running a standalone machine
and running a group of N>3 machines that have to talk. Somewhere around 5-10
computers, brute force techniques to install software like sneakernet start
to really break down.
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Robert G. Brown
Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305
Durham, N.C. 27708-0305
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