Developer's Release of Linux Cluster Software to Debut at Linux World
released
January 25, 2001
Contacts
Karen Green
NCSA
kareng@ncsa.uiuc.edu
217.265.0748
Ron Walli
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
wallira@ornl.gov
865.576.0226
NCSA, ORNL team with six industry leaders to create 'supercomputer on a CD'
CHAMPAIGN, IL/OAK RIDGE, TN Software that will make
configuring and maintaining a Linux cluster like installing commercial software from a CD will be demonstrated by Intel at next week's Linux World Conference in New York. In addition, IBM will discuss this software, called Open Source Cluster Applications Resources (OSCAR) in a presentation at IBM's Linux World booth.
OSCAR is ready for distribution to experienced cluster computing professionals as a developer's release. A full release of OSCAR for the wider cluster computing community will be ready in the near future.
OSCAR is being developed by the Open Cluster Group
(http://www.OpenClusterGroup.org),
a collaboration among major research centers and technology companies led by the
University of Illinois' National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA),
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), IBM and Intel. Other collaborators in the Open
Cluster Group are Dell, SGI, MSC.Software, and Veridian. Members of NCSA's cluster
development team will assist with the demo at Linux World. Dell will provide the equipment
for the demo.
"This software is a big step in the process of making clusters a simpler, more accessible
computing technology for the user community," said Rob Pennington, director of computing
and communications at NCSA and head of the center's cluster development efforts. "When our
first public version of OSCAR is released in a few weeks, it will make it possible to build
clusters quickly and easily using commodity hardware."
OSCAR is being developed as a complete Linux cluster infrastructure that allows users to
set up a parallel Linux supercomputing cluster in a matter of hours. The tools included
in OSCAR are all community accepted, tested, and configured to work together. Without
OSCAR, each of these tools would need to be installed, tested, and configured separately--a
process that can take days. Included in the package are Portable Batch System (PBS),
which queues computing jobs for running on a cluster, Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM),
which allows parallel applications to run on clusters, MPICH, a tool that allows Message
Passing Interface (MPI) codes to run on many high-end computing systems, and Cluster
Command and Control (C3), a suite of tools to simplify the use and administration of clusters.
"Commodity cluster computing is no longer just for technical experts; the simplicity of
OSCAR opens the doors to the general public," said Al Geist, head of the heterogeneous
distributed computing group at ORNL. "Participation by IBM, Intel, and other vendors in
the OSCAR cluster software effort plays a key role in public acceptance."
The developer's version of OSCAR supports Linux clusters using Intel IA-32 processors.
The subsequent full release of OSCAR will also support the IA-32 processor with support
for Intel's new Itanium™ processor to follow in summer 2001.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory is a Department of Energy multiprogram facility operated
by UT-Battelle. Funding for ORNL is provided by the Mathematical, Information, and
Computational Sciences (MICS) Division of the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing
Research (OASCR) of the US Department of Energy (DOE). For more information, see
http://www.csm.ornl.gov.
The National Center for Supercomputing Applications is the leading-edge site for the
National Computational Science Alliance. NCSA is a leader in the development and
deployment of cutting-edge high-performance computing, networking, and information
technologies. The National Science Foundation, the state of Illinois, the University of
Illinois, industrial partners, and other federal agencies fund NCSA. For more information
visit http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
The National Computational Science Alliance is a partnership to prototype an advanced
computational infrastructure for the 21st century and includes more than 50 academic,
government and industry research partners from across the United States. The Alliance is
one of two partnerships funded by the National Science Foundation's Partnerships for
Advanced Computational Infrastructure (PACI) program, and receives cost-sharing at
partner institutions. NSF also supports the National Partnership for Advanced Computational
Infrastructure (NPACI), led by the San Diego Supercomputer Center. For more information
see http://alliance.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
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