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OK, so you've worked your way through the first umpty-chapters of this
book (and possibly the Sterling, Salmon, Becker and Savarese book, and
the HOWTO's, and the FAQ) and have picked a beowulf architecture.
You've probably priced it out, as well, as cost-benefit was undoubtedly
an important part of your selection criteria. You are probably almost ready to order the parts...
First, however, there are a few things you might not have thought
about yet that you definitely need to consider11.1. Let's arrange them in a
bulleted checklist (to see what they all are) and then we'll briefly
discuss each one.
- Where are you going to put it? Is there enough space/volume? Is
it convenient to the expected users of the system(s)?
- Is the floor of your space strong enough to support the weight of
all that iron (no kidding!)?
- How are you going to provide power to all the nodes and switches
and so forth11.2?
- How are you going to remove all that power when is released
in the form of heat during operation? Is there enough air conditioning?
- Are there other infrastructure requirements? Do you need to run
additional network lines into the space? A phone line? A thermal kill
switch?
- Do you need any additional security measures for the space?
- Don't forget about physical network support, as in cable
trays, places to run wire neatly, connections to any requisite LAN or
WAN.
- What about a handy place to work on nodes? They won't run
forever; you'll be in there fixing them.
- How are you going to pay for the recurring costs of running
the nodes, and the amortized costs for renovating or ``renting'' the
space it requires so that it has enough power, cooling, strong floors,
security, network trays, workbench and tools and so forth?
``Hmmm,'' you say. ``Spent so long thinking about the programs
and the node hardware that I forgot about the physical
requirements of all those nodes.'' I thought so. Let's take them in
order.
Subsections
Next: Location, location, location
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Robert G. Brown
2004-05-24