One comment on “building a cluster with VMs”

Part of bringing up a cluster is learning how to manage the interconnects, and 
loading software into the nodes, and then finding the tools to manage a bunch 
of different machines simultaneously, as well as issues around shared network 
drives, boot images, etc.

I would think (but have not tried) that the multi-VM approach is a bit too 
unrealistically easy – I assume you can do MPI between VMs, so you could 
certainly practice with parallel coding.  But it seems that spinning up 
identical instances, all that can see the same host resources, on the same 
machine with the same display and keyboard kind of bypasses a lot of the hard 
stuff.

OTOH, If you want a cheap experience at getting the booting working, 
controlling multiple machines, learning pdsh, etc. you could just get 3 or 4 
Rpis or beagles, and face all the problems of a real cluster (including 
managing a rat’s nest of wires and cables)



From: Beowulf <beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org> on behalf of 
"jaquil...@eagleeyet.net" <jaquil...@eagleeyet.net>
Date: Sunday, February 9, 2020 at 10:30 PM
To: "Renfro, Michael" <ren...@tntech.edu>, "beowulf@beowulf.org" 
<beowulf@beowulf.org>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [Beowulf] Have machine, will compute: ESXi or bare 
metal?

Hi Guys just piggy backing on this thread

I am considering upgrading my pc to 64gb of ram and setting it up as a win 10 
based hyper-v host. Would you say this is a good way to learn how to put a 
cluster together with out the need to invest in a small number of servers? My 
pc is a ryzen 5 3600 6 core 12 thread cpu motherboard is an msi b450 tomahawk 
max gaming motherboard currently 32gb ddr4 3200 upgradable to 64.

Let me know your thoughts.

Regards,
Jonathan Aquilina

EagleEyeT
Phone +356 20330099
Sales – sa...@eagleeyet.net<mailto:sa...@eagleeyet.net>
Support – supp...@eagleeyet.net

From: Beowulf <beowulf-boun...@beowulf.org> On Behalf Of Renfro, Michael
Sent: Monday, 10 February 2020 03:17
To: beowulf@beowulf.org
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] Have machine, will compute: ESXi or bare metal?

No reason you can’t, especially if you’re not interested in benchmark runs 
(there’s a chance that if you ran a lot of heavily-loaded VMs, there could be 
CPU contention on the host).

Any cluster development work I’ve done lately has used VMware VMs exclusively.



On Feb 9, 2020, at 7:10 PM, Mark Kosmowski 
<mark.kosmow...@solidstatecomputation.com> wrote:

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________________________________

I purchased a Cisco UCS C460 M2 (4 @ 10 core Xeons, 128 GB total RAM) for $115 
in my local area.  If I used ESXi (free license), I am limited to 8 vcpu per 
VM.  Could I make a virtual Beowulf cluster out of some of these VMs?  I'm 
thinking this way I can learn cluster admin without paying the power bill for 
my ancient Opteron boxes and also scratch my illumos itch while computing on 
Linux.

Thank you!
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