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Full Discussion: Linux cluster
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing Linux cluster Post 302384152 by otheus on Monday 4th of January 2010 07:23:20 AM
Old 01-04-2010
You indeed have a cluster of Linux servers. What you are trying to do is to get your cluster to perform certain tasks in parallel. There are three different kinds of tasks you can do: (1) system administration, (2) compilation and making, and (3) task execution. So far people have commented on a solution for (2) -- pdcc and make -j can be used for this -- and for (3) SGE, but also openmpi. For (1) -- administration -- having only 5 computers is small enough to do it by hand -- ie, use command-line and scripts to synchronize the hosts. But but you can also use parallelizing remote execution tools such as pdsh or mussh, or cluster tools such as flamethrower and rdist to make your life easier.

To get all of the above from scratch, I highly recommend ROCKS, which will install a standardized linux framework on all the hosts, complete with monitoring, and a fully integrated parallel execution environment based on whichever "Rolls" you select (ie, SGE or Torque; OpenMPI or MPICH; Intel CC or GNU CC; etc).
 

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PG_WRAPPER(1)						 Debian PostgreSQL infrastructure					     PG_WRAPPER(1)

NAME
pg_wrapper - wrapper for PostgreSQL client commands SYNOPSIS
client-program [--cluster version/cluster] [...] (client-program: psql, createdb, dropuser, and all other client programs installed in /usr/lib/postgresql/version/bin). DESCRIPTION
This program is run only as a link to names which correspond to PostgreSQL programs in /usr/lib/postgresql/version/bin. It determines the configured cluster and database for the user and calls the appropriate version of the desired program to connect to that cluster and database, supplying any specified options to that command. The target cluster is selected by the following means, in descending order of precedence: 1. explicit specification with the --host option 2. explicit specification with the --cluster option 3. if the PGHOST environment variable is set, no further cluster selection is performed. The default PostgreSQL version and port number (from the command line, the environment variable PGPORT, or default 5432) will be used. 4. explicit specification with the PGCLUSTER environment variable 5. matching entry in ~/.postgresqlrc (see postgresqlrc(5)), if that file exists 6. matching entry in /etc/postgresql-common/user_clusters (see user_clusters(5)), if that file exists 7. If only one local cluster exists, that one will be selected. 8. If several local clusters exist, the one listening on the default port 5432 will be selected. If none of these rules match, pg_wrapper aborts with an error. OPTIONS
--cluster version/cluster cluster is either the name of a local cluster, or takes the form host:port for a remote cluster. If port is left empty (i. e. you just specify host:), it defaults to 5432. ENVIRONMENT
PGCLUSTER If $PGCLUSTER is set, its value (of the form version/cluster) specifies the desired cluster, similar to the --cluster option. However, if --cluster is specified, it overrides the value of $PGCLUSTER. PG_CLUSTER_CONF_ROOT This specifies an alternative base directory for cluster configurations. This is usually /etc/postgresql/, but for testing/development purposes you can change this to point to e. g. your home directory, so that you can use the postgresql-common tools without root privileges. FILES
/etc/postgresql-common/user_clusters stores the default cluster and database for users and groups as set by the administrators. $HOME/.postgresqlrc stores defaults set by the user himself. SEE ALSO
user_clusters(5), postgresqlrc(5) AUTHOR
Martin Pitt <mpitt@debian.org> Debian 2013-01-04 PG_WRAPPER(1)
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