New book on Linux clusters

Sebastopol 26 July 2000 "Building Linux Clusters" is a new book by David HM Spector introducing Beowulf clusters. The list of the world's most powerful supercomputers now includes Beowulf machines: PCs running Linux, clustered together into a single machine. "From scientific applications to transaction processing, clustering technology provides an affordable, scalable computing solution. One of the hottest topics in Linux today is the ability to cluster Linux machines to mimic the performance of supercomputers (costing hundreds of thousands of dollars) for a fraction of the cost.", the author claims.

"Computing problems always seem to meet or exceed available computing resources. There is always a need for more processing power, more network bandwidth, and greater I/O capabilities," says Spector. "This need for speed has prompted a whole new class of machines: supercomputers. In fact, supercomputer class machines -- the construction of which is the topic of my book -- influence almost every aspect of modern life."

"The Linux operating system has given rise to a host of interesting and unique computing possibilities that would have been impossible, and perhaps even unthinkable, in a pre-Linux era," says Spector. Some examples that Spector gives, include:

    --  A single cross-platform operating system

    --  An open source operating system whose entire code base is
        freely available for research, commercial use, and improvement

    --  A system that has the potential to displace both Unix variants
        and Windows NT as a server operating system

    --  A scalable parallel processing system that allows performance
        comparable to traditional supercomputers (IBM SP/2 or Cray),
        but at a fraction of the cost

"Since the ground-breaking work was done at NASA, Beowulf-style clusters have become their own well-defined genre of high-performance computing systems," explains Spector. "By October 1999, several of the systems in the top 200 supercomputers in the world were made up of Linux cluster systems."

Spector's first Linux cluster, and ultimately his new book "Building Linux Clusters", arose from his need for an affordable home supercomputer for his research. Building it was a challenge. "I noticed that a lot of people talk about it, but the documentation is really terse. There's no way for someone to start who doesn't have all the knowledge already." Spector wrote up an outline and realized it would make a great O'Reilly book. And, as it turned out, O'Reilly was looking for just such a book.

"Building Linux Clusters" is a hands-on guide for people new to clusters. "Like most O'Reilly books," said Spector, "it's to get people going. You can build a cluster right out of the box: You pop the CD in, follow the instructions, and in ten or twenty minutes you have a fully functional cluster."


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