Query: Blast on Scyld beowulf
Tim Chipman
timchipman at MailAndNews.com
Fri Aug 10 15:19:32 PDT 2001
I apologize if this topic has been hashed over a million times ; I've just
joined the list, and read through the last year worth of archived postings. No
clear success so though I should ask.
I'm curious about the feasibility of running sequence analysis apps (blast,
hmmer, fasta) on a scyld-beowulf setup.
I have seen some mention of "demos done by tigr at recent conferences of blast
on beowulf" ; other mention that "no free parallelized blast is yet available,
use fasta instead" ; and a great archive of discussion on the topic at the
URL,
http://sapiens.wustl.edu/~ikorf/beowulf.html , which highlights the
differences / possible more appropriate arrangements of batch job queues vs.
parallelized jobs.
Additionally, most discussions I've found on the 'net (via google searches)
pre-date scyld beowulf and typically take the approach of earlier more
traditional beowulf clusters where each node had a full OS install, apps &
data maintained locally (or via NFS shares) & the like.
Ideally, what I'm looking for is comments on how one can setup things to work
with a scyld beowulf (hence more straightforward to setup / maintain) and what
(if any) tweaks are required to encourage relatively efficient use of
resources.
I also suspect that the soon-to-be-available new scyld beowulf (which includes
PVM out of the box, not present previously?) will be a significant help.. but
of course I'm still a tad unclear. Sigh.
All this to say: If anyone has any pointers or comments relating to this topic
of (dna,protein) sequence analysis / comparison on scyld beowulf (even if it
is to say, "blargh! you must you *this* 'other' implementation..") ... then I
will certainly very much appreciate if people can e-mail me such info.
If I get a significant number of replies, I'll probably post a summary to the
list of the salient points, just to create a reference which will help prevent
other newbies like myself from asking the same questions in the near future.
Thanks very much,
Tim Chipman
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