Hi,
Chris you`re right, I used apt-get for munge and slurm-llnl
cat /etc/issue: Debian GNU/Linux 7 \n \l
Maria


2015-01-08 0:04 GMT+01:00 Christopher Samuel <[email protected]>:

>
> On 08/01/15 08:50, Maria Kreutel wrote:
>
> > I´m trying to set up slurm for a cluster which consists of Head- and
> > Compute node (Debian 4.6.3-14).
>
> What does cat /etc/issue say?
>
> There was no Debian 4.6.3, Debian 4.0 was codename Etch and released in
> 2007 and that went up to 4.0r9 as the last release in 2010 before being
> archived.  4.6.3-14 *looks* like the GCC version number in Debian Wheezy
> (v7).
>
> > I installed munge (munge-0.5.10) via rpm and got it running on both head
> > and node. I installed slurm-llnl (2.3.4-2) via rpm as well
>
> If this is Debian you shouldn't be installing with RPM, you should be
> installing with apt-get (or aptitude) instead.
>
> In current Debian releases the Slurm packages are called slurm-llnl, but
> in the next major release (Jessie, aka 8.0) it will become slurm-wlm
> (with slurm-llnl being a transitional "dummy" package to facilitate the
> rename on systems being upgraded).
>
> You can see more information here:
>
> https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/slurm-llnl
>
> If you're on Wheezy that will give you Slurm 2.3.4 (Jessie will have
> Slurm 14.03.9).
>
> Hope this helps!
> Chris
> --
>  Christopher Samuel        Senior Systems Administrator
>  VLSCI - Victorian Life Sciences Computation Initiative
>  Email: [email protected] Phone: +61 (0)3 903 55545
>  http://www.vlsci.org.au/      http://twitter.com/vlsci
>

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