> The great thing about this type of question is that it can easily > be the start of a nice little flame war. :)
Indeed =) > I have found, however, that books are sometimes not a very helpful > source of information in this particular field. I'll add to this. I've read Becker's own "How to Build a Beowulf", and can say he's right on the point when he mentions that "all litterature about clusters is hopelessly outdated by the time it comes out" (or words to that effect). Nothing can beat having a knowledgeable linux admin handy, some free time, and an awful lot of patience (and an understanding boss, depending...) What you should clue yourself about is basic multi-threading concepts and networking issues, and then try to run (and understand) a few cluster-specific softwares. In my case, the 'training' was 'install it and play with it 'til it works'. Seems to have worked (in a kinda-sort-of way). Another big problem is that most clusters are custom-designed for a specific task. In our case, we ended up with an hybrid machine running OpenPBS (queue), MOSIX and LAM/MPI custom software on a cluster that is our new departmental server for processing of all sorts. Unless you are clustering for home use (in which case you should try anything you can put your hand on), expect your requirements to vary wildly from mine, from the next guy's, etc. Wildly enough to invalidate any simple HOWTO or book on clustering. You WILL need to educate yourself, to learn what you need it to do, to investigate available software, etc. Christian Lavoie [EMAIL PROTECTED] 0

