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Thread: LAM: Migrating to OpenMpi




LAM: Migrating to OpenMpi
country flaguser name
United Kingdom
2007-02-15 11:35:45

Hi all

I'm looking for some basic help with a fresh open-mpi installation.   Main question first and background to follow:

Is open-mpi as tolerant of heterogeneous low spec hardware as lam was?

I sysadmin a small cluster for a research company.  ; The project for which this cluster is required drifts in and out of importance and as such, our last install (back in 2002) was lam-6.5.9 - which worked fine on an 8 node cluster running Slackware 7.1.   Some were as old as Pentium 1-120s with 12 Mb of RAM ranging up to P3-666 and 128Mb of RAM.   As I say, it all hung together well and did the job.

The programmers tell me they now need open-mpi as subsequent releases of lam refused to compile on this hardware - not sure why (lack of RAM I guess) but as a humble sysadmin, I don't want to get too far into it - as long as I did:

./configure
make all
make install

and setup appropriate permissions on each node - it worked!

So if we decide to use openmpi instead of lam, is it worth bothering with the existing hardware?   To be fair, the Pentium 1's have now been dropped but all of the "new" hardware is around the P3 spec with 64-128Mb of RAM.

Any constructive help gratefully received - but before you ask - no - the company isn't about to buy any new high-end workstations to replace this old kit!   They would rather stick with lam on old kit than buy new kit to allow openmpi to run.

Cheers
Rob

Re: LAM: Migrating to OpenMpi
country flaguser name
United States
2007-02-15 12:39:03
Hi Rob,

Open MPI *should* work just fine on older hardware. However,
as far  
as I know none of the developers regularly run on older
hardware. So  
my advice is to try it, and decide whether it is right for
your  
environment. If you have any issues please post them to the
Open MPI  
users mailing list.

I guess I can't tell you if it is 'worth' upgrading the
existing  
setup to Open MPI. This really depends on your specific
setup, what  
features you use, etc. Personally I usually follow the
"if it ain't  
broke don't fix it" mentality, but if Open MPI has
features you want  
it might be worth upgrading.

Good luck!

Tim

On Feb 15, 2007, at 12:35 PM, Rob Malpass wrote:

> Hi all
>
> I'm looking for some basic help with a fresh open-mpi 

> installation.   Main question first and background to
follow:
>
> Is open-mpi as tolerant of heterogeneous low spec
hardware as lam was?
>
> I sysadmin a small cluster for a research company.  
The project  
> for which this cluster is required drifts in and out of
importance  
> and as such, our last install (back in 2002) was
lam-6.5.9 - which  
> worked fine on an 8 node cluster running Slackware 7.1.
  Some were  
> as old as Pentium 1-120s with 12 Mb of RAM ranging up
to P3-666 and  
> 128Mb of RAM.   As I say, it all hung together well and
did the job.
>
> The programmers tell me they now need open-mpi as
subsequent  
> releases of lam refused to compile on this hardware -
not sure why  
> (lack of RAM I guess) but as a humble sysadmin, I don't
want to get  
> too far into it - as long as I did:
>
> ./configure
> make all
> make install
>
> and setup appropriate permissions on each node - it
worked!
>
> So if we decide to use openmpi instead of lam, is it
worth  
> bothering with the existing hardware?   To be fair, the
Pentium 1's  
> have now been dropped but all of the "new"
hardware is around the  
> P3 spec with 64-128Mb of RAM.
>
> Any constructive help gratefully received - but before
you ask - no  
> - the company isn't about to buy any new high-end
workstations to  
> replace this old kit!   They would rather stick with
lam on old kit  
> than buy new kit to allow openmpi to run.
>
> Cheers
> Rob
>
> _______________________________________________
> This list is archived at http://www.l
am-mpi.org/MailArchives/lam/

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