On 2/28/20 5:00 AM, Paddy Doyle wrote:
> We're a university HPC centre.
[snip]
> Plus the stability of the longer RHEL life cycle has been a big
> plus for stable clusters (*).
>
[snip]
>
> (*) although more recently some people are asking more and more for the
> latest and greatest.. yes, we'r
We're a university HPC centre.
We've been using SL since at least SL4 (before that was before my time),
and currently mostly on SL7 with a few SL6 still dotted around on older
clusters.
Certainly in the past there was a requirement to have a RHEL-like OS for
certain core software packages. Probab
Didn't plan on chiming in but Larry's post tugged.
I started with Slackware in '93, kernel 1.3, looking for an cheap X11
workstation alternative to the then $15k a pop SunOS workstations, of which we
could only afford 2. I proposed to my division director to let me buy 12
Pentium 90's at $2k
Bonjour,
> On 25. Feb 2020, at 10:49, Winnie Lacesso
> wrote:
>
> This was posted to SLU in 2012 but didn't get any actual answers. It's
> reposted in case anyone can firmly say (or no) that the situation has
> changed or is the same. *Is* it true that CentOS still have a period when
> they do
Brett Viren wrote on 2/25/20 8:15 AM:
"Peter Willis" writes:
Perhaps, if it’s not too much trouble, people on the list might give a short
blurb about
how they use it and why.
Not quite a short blurb, but not too long either.
I am retired now (nearly 4 years) after nearly 50 years in the IT
Hi Konstantin,
Konstantin Olchanski writes:
> This happened right after the first quad-PentiumPro machines became
> available, with Dell dual-PentiumII/III to follow soon after.
Yes and it's why www.phy.bnl.gov is running on a system that still
caries the (internal) hostname "phyppro1"!
> I am
On Tue, Feb 25, 2020 at 09:15:35AM -0500, Brett Viren wrote:
>
> You might ask "why is there a HEP monoculture based on Red Hat?". That
> would be an interesting story if someone knows the details. ...
>
> I suspect the actions of a small number of early movers led to RH's
> dominance in HEP. I
>
>
> https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__nam01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com_-3Furl-3Dhttps-253A-252F-252Furldefense.proofpoint.com-252Fv2-252Furl-253Fu-253Dhttp-2D3A-5F-5Fwww.cs.concordia.ca-5F-2D7Emokhov-2526d-253DDwIFaQ-2526c-253DgRgGjJ3BkIsb5y6s49QqsA-2526r-253Dgd8BzeSQcySV
"Peter Willis" writes:
> Perhaps, if it’s not too much trouble, people on the list might give a short
> blurb about
> how they use it and why.
SL (and soon changing to Centos) provides a monoculture in HEP computing
so there is no choice for me but to consider it.
I use Debian-based distributi
Bonjour,
This was posted to SLU in 2012 but didn't get any actual answers. It's
reposted in case anyone can firmly say (or no) that the situation has
changed or is the same. *Is* it true that CentOS still have a period when
they do *not* release security updates for earlier OS dot releases, thus
l
On 2/24/20 8:09 AM, Peter Willis wrote:
> Hello,
Greetings!
> The variation in uses of t Scientific Linux is quite interesting.
>
> As mentioned before, we are using it for fluid dynamics modelling and
> oceanography, in the context of parallel computing with OpenMP and MPICH.
>
> I am curious
> Tom Eastlake
> Cleveland, OH, USA
>
> -
> From: "Peter Willis"
> To: scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov
> Cc:
> Sent: Monday February 24 2020 9:09:27AM
> Subject: Who Uses Scientific Linux, and How/Why?
>
>
__
> From: owner-scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov
> on behalf of Serguei Mokhov
>
> Sent: Monday, February 24, 2020 9:49 AM
> To: Peter Willis
> Cc: scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov
> Subject: Re: Who Uses Scientific Linux, and How/Why?
ubject: Re: Who Uses Scientific Linux, and How/Why?
In the Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science, at
Concordia University, Montreal, we've been using SL since around SL5
for our 100+ servers, 1000+ lab desktops (dual boot), and recent HPC
facility Speed (concordia.ca/ginacody/aits/sp
At my previous job, we used it for microprocessor development, along with
commercial tools and the Torque/Moab batch queuing system. The software tools
team used it as well.
I used it on al our home computers for several years but eventually switched to
Fedora to be able to use more recent deskt
In the Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science, at
Concordia University, Montreal, we've been using SL since around SL5
for our 100+ servers, 1000+ lab desktops (dual boot), and recent HPC
facility Speed (concordia.ca/ginacody/aits/speed) loaded with all kind
of engineering and paralle
: "Peter Willis"
To: scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov
Cc:
Sent: Monday February 24 2020 9:09:27AM
Subject: Who Uses Scientific Linux, and How/Why?
*
Hello,
The variation in uses of t Scientific Linux is quite interesting.
As mentioned before, we ar
Hello,
The variation in uses of t Scientific Linux is quite interesting.
As mentioned before, we are using it for fluid dynamics modelling and
oceanography, in the context of parallel computing with OpenMP and MPICH.
I am curious to see what everyone else have been using it for.
Perhaps, if
18 matches
Mail list logo