Yes, that is a possibility.  Instructions on that, please?
I tried installing caos linux, but it doesn't quite finish doing the install.

Daniel

On 8/28/08, ron minnich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  Use perceus.
>
>  Ron
>
>
>  On 8/28/08, Daniel Gruner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  >
>  > Hi All,
>  >
>  > The list has been very quiet lately... :-)
>  >
>  > I've been trying, yet again, to install the latest xcpu2 in a test
>  > cluster.  Ron's instructions on the xcpu.org site seem to be outdated,
>  > and partly buggy too.  For instance, here are a couple of points:
>  >
>  > - After doing:
>  >
>  > make xcpu-tarball
>  >
>  > make ramfs-tarball
>  >
>  > make install
>  >
>  > I don't know whether xcpu2 has actually been built (I suspect not),
>  > and it certainly has not been installed (e.g. no xrx, or xcpufs, or
>  > any of that stuff has been installed).
>  >
>  > - The command
>  >
>  > export u=`uname -r`
>  > ./mk-initramfs-oneSIS -f initrd-$u.img $u -nn -rr \
>  > -o ../overlays/xcpu-64 \
>  > -w e1000 \
>  > -w forcedeth \
>  > -w ext3
>  >
>  > should really be
>  >
>  > ./mk-xcpu-oneSIS ....
>  >
>  > in order that the 9p and 9pnet modules get loaded into the initrd.
>  >
>  > Can someone please take a look and revise the instructions (and let us
>  > mere mortals know what to do)?
>  >
>  >
>  > Furthermore, is xcpu2 actualy useable for production work?  What about
>  > its integration with a scheduler/resource manager?  What about MPI?
>  >
>  > Regards,
>  > Daniel
>  >
>
>
> --
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