Cluster Computing: Difference between revisions

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* http://www.computing.dcu.ie/~msc/cluster/
* http://www.computing.dcu.ie/~msc/cluster/
* [[Media:Rbwiki_ClusterComputing_LinuxCluster.doc|Initial proposal document for the School of Computing, DCU]]
* [[Media:Rbwiki_ClusterComputing_LinuxCluster.doc|Initial proposal document for the School of Computing, DCU]]
==Further Developments:==
With the loss of a postgrad admin (Karl Podesta), and the arrival at the School of Computing of a commercial cluster brought through a tender process for the National Institute of Cellular Biotechnology (16 dual-CPU nodes Dell Poweredge running Red Hat Linux), the old Redbrick cluster has been since decommissioned after providing a platform for 2 years of research within the "ModSci" research group. The new commercial cluster is now only available for use via special request by students & staff of NICB, or of the Masters in Bioinformatics, and not open to all students. A new commodity cluster specifically for the School of Computing has been set up by Neil Costigan working in cryptography on elliptic curves.


==Related Links:==
==Related Links:==

Revision as of 10:10, 29 May 2006

In the summer of 2001, Redbrick members built a Beowulf Linux Cluster for the School of Computing, DCU. We used 23 old lab computers that would have been thrown out, were granted access to a lab (LG28) in which to put it together for the month of July, experimented with a few different setups, and finally gave the school a system that was used for research in the "Modelling & Scientific Computing" Research Group.

CA4 projects using the cluster included analysis of digital video (cutting shots & scenes), and parallelisation of the QCL (Quantum Computing Language). Postgraduate research was conducted mostly on the analysis of biological data (DNA & protein sequences), but also on models of biological systems (immune system response, drug dissolution).

Further Developments:

With the loss of a postgrad admin (Karl Podesta), and the arrival at the School of Computing of a commercial cluster brought through a tender process for the National Institute of Cellular Biotechnology (16 dual-CPU nodes Dell Poweredge running Red Hat Linux), the old Redbrick cluster has been since decommissioned after providing a platform for 2 years of research within the "ModSci" research group. The new commercial cluster is now only available for use via special request by students & staff of NICB, or of the Masters in Bioinformatics, and not open to all students. A new commodity cluster specifically for the School of Computing has been set up by Neil Costigan working in cryptography on elliptic curves.

Related Links: