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Full Discussion: SSI or not??
Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications High Performance Computing SSI or not?? Post 302665403 by navic on Monday 2nd of July 2012 12:28:22 PM
Old 07-02-2012
SSI or not??

I'm new to HPC so forgive me if this question is extremely simple.

I have a cluster and each node has multiple NICs. I need the master to be able to see the nodes NICs as if they were it's own. The vision is being able to run ifconfig and see a bunch of ethX entries on the master when in fact say eth1 - eth15 are located on other nodes.

While researching a solution I came across OpenSSI and thought this would provide the correct functionality, but the only thing I can do is list the local interfaces on nodes with the 'node X ifconfig' command.

Is SSI even the technology that'll make node interfaces look local to the master or am I barking up the wrong tree? Does anyone have experience with a system as described?

Thanks!
 

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pool(3erl)						     Erlang Module Definition							pool(3erl)

NAME
pool - Load Distribution Facility DESCRIPTION
pool can be used to run a set of Erlang nodes as a pool of computational processors. It is organized as a master and a set of slave nodes and includes the following features: * The slave nodes send regular reports to the master about their current load. * Queries can be sent to the master to determine which node will have the least load. The BIF statistics(run_queue) is used for estimating future loads. It returns the length of the queue of ready to run processes in the Erlang runtime system. The slave nodes are started with the slave module. This effects, tty IO, file IO, and code loading. If the master node fails, the entire pool will exit. EXPORTS
start(Name) -> start(Name, Args) -> Nodes Types Name = atom() Args = string() Nodes = [node()] Starts a new pool. The file .hosts.erlang is read to find host names where the pool nodes can be started. See section Files below. The start-up procedure fails if the file is not found. The slave nodes are started with slave:start/2,3 , passing along Name and, if provided, Args . Name is used as the first part of the node names, Args is used to specify command line arguments. See slave(3erl) . Access rights must be set so that all nodes in the pool have the authority to access each other. The function is synchronous and all the nodes, as well as all the system servers, are running when it returns a value. attach(Node) -> already_attached | attached Types Node = node() This function ensures that a pool master is running and includes Node in the pool master's pool of nodes. stop() -> stopped Stops the pool and kills all the slave nodes. get_nodes() -> Nodes Types Nodes = [node()] Returns a list of the current member nodes of the pool. pspawn(Mod, Fun, Args) -> pid() Types Mod = Fun = atom() Args = [term()] Spawns a process on the pool node which is expected to have the lowest future load. pspawn_link(Mod, Fun, Args) -> pid() Types Mod = Fun = atom() Args = [term()] Spawn links a process on the pool node which is expected to have the lowest future load. get_node() -> node() Returns the node with the expected lowest future load. FILES
.hosts.erlang is used to pick hosts where nodes can be started. See net_adm(3erl) for information about format and location of this file. $HOME/.erlang.slave.out.HOST is used for all additional IO that may come from the slave nodes on standard IO. If the start-up procedure does not work, this file may indicate the reason. Ericsson AB stdlib 1.17.3 pool(3erl)
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