[Beowulf] Network considerations for new generation cheap beowulf cluster
Jess Cannata
jac67 at georgetown.edu
Fri May 18 13:44:29 PDT 2007
While I can't foresee the future, I do think that we are going to a lot
more low latency 10 Gb/s cards that use standard 10 Gb switches and
cables such as Myricom's 10 Gb Myrinet/Ethernet card and NetEffect's 10
Gb Ethernet card.
http://www.myricom.com/Myri-10G/product_list.html
http://www.neteffect.com/ne020-features.html
Jess
Vincent Diepeveen wrote:
> hi All of you,
>
> Now that developments go fast in CPU land, by 22 july or so, intel
> drops price of its quad core to $266 more or less.
> Hopefully AMD's quadcore chip releases soon too for a decent price.
>
> As intels memory subsystem is real weak, not to mention the extra
> price that AMD and intel ask for dual socket/quad socket capable
> chips, the optimal node is a single socket node.
>
> 4 cores is already a lot anyway for 1 highend network card.
>
> That means in short that you can produce for quite little money, far
> under $500, a node with 4 cores,
> or considering the far higher taxrates in Europe, far under 500 euro
> in Europe.
>
> Basically what a node needs is a mainboard, a bit of RAM, and a cpu
> with cooler. That keeps a node tiny and it's easier coolable. With
> some wood then you can build a great case that holds many nodes.
> Booting of course diskless over the gigabit network. Of course
> interesting to know secondly is whether putting in ECC-reg ram is
> interesting, considering its scandaleous high price always.
>
> What are opinions here?
>
> Of course now the question is how to get a reasonable low latency
> highend network with a reasonable bandwidth (latency bigger priority
> than bandwidth of course) and of course being capable of reading in
> memory without writing. Of course the switch/routing prices + cable
> prices need to be included in those price considerations.
>
> Perhaps some bit older generation card gets sold very cheap now. What
> are the options the coming years there, any manufacturer keeping up
> with the dropped price of a single quad core node?
>
> Gigabit ethernet is not an option of course, that just works for
> embarrassingly parallel software, it's usually interrupting bigtime
> the cpu and has an ugly one-way pingpong latency, especially when
> there is several threads simultaneously shipping messages.
>
> What are the options for the network in the future?
>
> Vincent
>
>
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