On a bang for the buck, horsepower wise, it's usually better to go single 
processor than spread the load across many smaller processors, unless your 
application can make use of parallelism (so while you get fewer MIPS total for 
a given amount of cash, your problem completes faster, and that's worth 
something)

On the other hand, to experiment with clustering, it might not be all that bad. 
  By the time you get everything hooked up, though, you might be better off 
stepping up a bit to a low end conventional PC, just because you might be able 
to do more experimental stuff with it (e.g. hook up two network adapters, or 
something).

As far as educational clusters go, Arduinos vs rPi is an interesting choice.  
Both could be set up to do message passing and work out algorithms and 
communications strategies..  The extremely limited code space on the Arduino is 
a problem, but you have a wealth of inexpensive blinky lights type peripherals 
for it.

Yes, you could run a simulation on a regular old PC, but there's a sort of 
tactile satisfaction to having a bunch of little boxes/boards, and it would 
lend itself to experiments with different networking topologies, for instance: 
comparing rings, double rings, shared bus, 2 surfaces connected at edges or 
not, higher dimensional hypercubes, etc.     With either one, you could 
experiment with things like propagating new software across the cluster, 
perhaps with unreliable links, or using random mesh interconnectivity.

Let us not also forget the marketing value of a table full of blinky lights 
computers compared to a bunch of boxes displayed on a screen.  If you were 
trying to sell the concept to be used at full scale with bigger faster nodes, 
the working demo might be more convincing.



Jim Lux

From: beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org [mailto:beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org] On 
Behalf Of Lee Eric
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2012 7:19 AM
To: beowulf@beowulf.org
Subject: [Beowulf] Help: Raspberry Pi Cluster

Hi,

I'm wondering if it's possible to create a small HPC by using Raspberry Pi 
computers. It's only a draft idea comes to my mind. So any issues w/ this idea?

Thanks.

Eric
_______________________________________________
Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org sponsored by Penguin Computing
To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit 
http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf

Reply via email to