Hi all,
I noticed that lustre was taken into the mainline kernel 3.11 and was
wondering what that means for lustre, will we be able to install
lustre without patching the kernel?
Does this mean that packages for other distros will become a lot easier?
Thanks,
Eli
Only the _client_ portion of lustre was added to the kernel tree, and
currently it is just in staging. We have been able to build the
lustre client without patches to the kernel for quite some time now,
independent of the work to get the client into the upstream kernel.
On the server side,
OpenSFS is happy to announce that LUG 2014 will be held in Miami, Florida,
from April 8-10, 2014. Please save the date!
OpenSFS http://www.opensfs.org/ , in collaboration with EOFS
http://www.eofs.eu , is proud to host the 12th annual Lustre User Group
(LUG) conference. LUG continues to be
Is there a public yum repo one can use for installing lustre packages?
--
Cheers, Prakash
On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 03:07:56PM +, Lee, Brett wrote:
CY,
If you have yum repo's configured, you should be able to use 'yum' instead of
'rpm', like:
# yum install lustre-tests-2.1.5-*
--
On 2013/07/18 3:36 PM, Prakash Surya sur...@llnl.gov wrote:
Is there a public yum repo one can use for installing lustre packages?
Don't quote me, but I think that every Jenkins build is a YUM repo.
Cheers, Andreas
On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 03:07:56PM +, Lee, Brett wrote:
CY,
If you have
The documentation suggests using
yum localinstall
lustre-tests-2.1.5-2.6.32_279.19.1.el6_lustre.x86_64.x86_64.rpm
That worked well for me, and found the dependent rpm just fine,
openmpi-1.5.4-1.el6.x86_64
bob
On 7/18/2013 8:00 PM, Dilger, Andreas wrote:
On 2013/07/18 3:36 PM, Prakash Surya