Bruno Coutinho wrote: > > physics requires such resources. It will also be used heavily > for Monte > > Carlo Simulations and just about any other form of computational > > physics. The two named are definite projects that are already on the
Well, as previously stated, RGB is definitely your guide. In fact in his book I remember mention of his utilization of computer clusters for just that, Monte Carlo Simulations. > > Being new to the Beowulf world, I am just mainly looking for some > advice > > as to what distro to use (I would never dream of setting up a > cluster on > > windows) and if there were any little tricks that weren't > mentioned in > > the setup how to guides. A few pointers in the right direction which may be helpful, me being relatively new to parallel computing also and at a University in your scaling situation. These basic sources are super helpful and can be found on Google: Robert G. Browns book: This in fact I stumbled upon and is the reason why I got into the subject of Beowulfs and parallel computing. This will immerse you in a vat of the theory involved (which is super important and far more impacting to the practical aspects than in most fields) and gives a taste of the practical. clustermonkey.net: This site also has some work by RGB as well as many other extremely valuable members of the Beowulf/HPC community which help you get going quickly. RGB's articles on starting your own compute cluster are rather practically and theoretically balanced, using really neat sidebars to give you some "experiments" to carry out. This very list: I've read a couple thousand emails since I joined the list and only recently decided anything I had to say was worthwhile. Sitting back and reading as those more experienced debate (and Rant, if your lucky) has seriously improved my knowledge in this area and provided exposure to the many tools you can utilize in your work. Also, and this is simply my (less than two years experience) perspective, but IMHO I would use the variety of Linux you are most comfortable with in the beginning using a very basic desktop/windows manager (such as xfce or fluxbox). This will allow you to get up and running quickly without killing all your resources by using KDE (or dare I say it, BERYL). You said you will expand every year, so you have some time beforehand to learn about the toolset you'd like to use, which in the end will guide your final decision on most efficient distribution anyhow. Ellis ____________________________________________________________________________________ Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page. http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf