DocumentCode
3024677
Title
High performance computing environments without the fuss: the Bootable Cluster CD
Author
Diesburg, Sarah M. ; Gray, Paul A. ; Joiner, David
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, IA, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
4-8 April 2005
Abstract
This paper confronts the issue of bringing high performance computing (HPC) education to those who do not have access to a dedicated clustering environments in an easy, fully-functional, inexpensive manner through the use of the "Bootable Cluster CD" (BCCD). As an example, many primarily undergraduate institutions (PUI\´s) do not have the facilities, time, or money to purchase hardware, maintain user accounts, configure software components, and keep ahead of the latest security advisories for a dedicated clustering environment. The BCCD project\´s primary goal is to support an instantaneous, drop-in distributed computing environment. A consequence of providing such an environment is the ability to promote the education of high performance computing issues at the undergraduate level through the ability to turn an ordinary lab of networked workstations temporarily into a non-invasive, fully-functional clustering classroom. The BCCD itself is a self-contained clustering environment in a bootable CD format. Using the BCCD, students, educators and researchers are able to gain insight into configuration, utilization, troubleshooting, debugging, and administration issues uniquely associated with parallel computing in a live, easy to use "drop-in" clustering environment. As the name implies, the BCCD provides a full, cohesive clustering environment running GNU/Linux when booted from the CDROM drives of networked workstations.
Keywords
CD-ROMs; Linux; computer science education; parallel processing; workstation clusters; Bootable Cluster CD; CDROM drives; GNU; Linux; distributed computing environment; high performance computing education; parallel computing; primarily undergraduate institution; software component; Chaos; Computer science; Computer science education; Distributed computing; Educational technology; High performance computing; Linux; Packaging; Parallel processing; Workstations; PXE-boot clusters; Practical experiences with parallel and distributed systems; clustering environments; diskless clusters; high performance computing education; high performance computing environments;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium, 2005. Proceedings. 19th IEEE International
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2312-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IPDPS.2005.244
Filename
1420189
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