04-10-2013
Unfortunately there are too many abbreviations in this industry, (insert personal rant about understandability V TLA fluency). KVM can mean
Kernel based Virtual Machine - which allows you create several virtual machines within a single instance of the OS.
Keyboard, Video, Mouse - A physical device for unifying access to several hosts within a single switch.
i suspect your mis-understanding of the power of KVM may result from a cross-pollination of these two meanings.
What you require is to cluster the physical hosts into a single instance... a non-definitive list of clustering solutions is available at
Comparison of cluster software - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
clmorder
clm order(1) USER COMMANDS clm order(1)
NAME
clm order - reorder clusterings conformal to inclusion structure
clmorder is not in actual fact a program. This manual page documents the behaviour and options of the clm program when invoked in mode
order. The options -h, --apropos, --version, -set, --nop are accessible in all clm modes. They are described in the clm manual page.
SYNOPSIS
clm order [-prefix <string> (file multiplex prefix)] [-o <fname> (concatenated output in single file)] <cluster|stack>+
DESCRIPTION
Given a set of input clusterings clm order first transform it into a stack of strictly nesting clusterings. It does this by splitting clus-
ters where necessary. It then reorders the coarsest (i.e. level-one) clustering, from large to small clusters. After that it reorders the
second coarsest clustering conformally such that the first batch among its reordered clusters covers the level-one largest cluster, the sec-
ond batch covers the level-one second largest cluster, and so on. Within these constraints, each batch of second-level clusters (correspond-
ing to a single first-level cluster) is again ordered from larger to smaller clusters. This process is applied recursively throughout the
entire stack of input clusters.
The input can be specified in multiple files, and a single file may contain multiple clusterings. The output is by default written as a con-
catenation of matrix files, the so-called stack format. Use the -o option to specify the output file. The stacked format can be converted to
Newick format using mcxdump(1). The output can be written to multiple files, one for each projected clustering, by using the -prefix option.
By example, -prefix P leads to output in files named P1, P2, ..PN, where N is the number of clusters in the input, P1 is the most fine-
grained ordered clustering, and PN is the coarsest clustering.
OPTIONS
-prefix (<string>)
-o (<fname>)
As decribed above.
AUTHOR
Stijn van Dongen.
SEE ALSO
mclfamily(7) for an overview of all the documentation and the utilities in the mcl family.
clm order 12-068 8 Mar 2012 clm order(1)