Gerry Creager wrote: > Eric Thibodeau wrote: >> Prentice Bisbal wrote: >>> The more services you run on your cluster node (gmond, sendmail, etc.) >>> the less performance is available for number crunching, but at the same >>> time, administration difficulty increases. For example, if you turn off >>> postfix/sendmail, you'll no longer get automated e-mails from your >>> system to alert you to a problem. >>> >>> My question is this: how extreme do you go in disabling non-essential >>> services on your cluster nodes? Do you turn off *everything* that's not >>> absolutely necessary, do you leave somethings running to make >>> administration easier? >>> >> Everything is turned off and, most of the time, a quick glance at >> ganglia brings out problems. Simple scripts can be built to perform >> cyclic checks on the nodes and would be less disruptive IMHO. >>> I'm curious to see how everyone else has their cluster(s) configured. >>> >> The only actual research I found on OS interference impacting HPC >> computing is titled "A measurement and simulation methodology for >> parallel computing performance studies" by Matthew Joseph Sottile. I >> would be curious to know if anyone else has dipped into the subject >> and come up with conclusive results on the subject. > > As a slightly OT question: I've recently heard it posited that ganglia > induces severe communications overhead ("It's chatty") and thus > shouldn't be used. What's the conventional wisdom thereof?
I believe it. I remember debugging a ganglia communication problem once, and saw LOTS of traffic with tcpdump. I would imagine that gmond produces a decent amount of load on the node everytime it polls the system. I could be wrong on that last part, since I don't understand how it works internally. If ganglia produces a lot of traffic and some overhead, is it really that bad to leave postfix/sendmail running so I can receive e-mail system e-mails? -- Prentice _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf