[Beowulf] hardware question: building a cluster node/ student workstation
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Nathan Moore ntmoore at gmail.comTue Jul 24 19:25:29 PDT 2007
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About a year ago I put together a small cluster of linux workstations for students in our department. At the time, I was conservative with spending money and outfitted each node with something like: Scientific Linux (RHEL 4) AMD 4400+ x2 Athlon 64 (dual core, 2MB L2) Abit nf-95 motherboard (cheapest socket 939 board at the time) 2GB RAM, DDR 400 200GB SATA hard drive integrated graphics, sound, 10/100 LAN The machines ran with NIS logins, NFS shared home directories, MPICH, an apache-hosted wiki, etc. For the purpose of student work the hardware setup seemed appropriate. Earlier this summer, the case fan on one of the machines failed, and the result seems like a cooked motherboard (erratic errors with the integrated NIC). The question I'm asking the list is the following: In a university setting I can't just ebay off the old parts and buy a new node. Thus I'm limited presently to looking for a motherboard with AMD's socket 939 and a few SATA2 ports - everything else is up for grabs. Is it worth my time (and funds) to buy a motherboard in the $200 range (ie something like a tyan s2866g3nr), or should I again go with the cheapest thing there is (something like an Asus a8v-xe in the $50 range). I don't really understand the distinction between these two groups of hardware. The tyan is probably a bad example because it has 3 network ports, but aside from this, they seem like basically the same board. I'd appreciate advice on putting together a decent machine. regards, Nathan Moore -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Nathan Moore Assistant Professor, Physics Winona State University AIM: nmoorewsu - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.scyld.com/pipermail/beowulf/attachments/20070724/232bd762/attachment.html
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