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CHAOS HowTo/Documentation

HowTo :: Build a supercomputer with a business card from your wallet
This document is the first HowTo in a series of HowTo's that will
document various facets of CHAOS, including functionality, usage and configuration
information. Each document will be stored online in PDF format. It is a good
read for those who have not yet constructed an openMosix cluster from the CHAOS
distribution. What you will learn here, is how to construct a distributed
processing environment from any of the network connected Pentium-grade computers
that you already have access too.
It is beyond the scope of this document to convey details on burning
CDROM images, using unix/Linux shell commands, constructing IP networks. This
document will not go into detail regarding the individual CHAOS OS components,
these details can already be found amongst the technical pages.
Prerequisites
You should be familiar with the general administration and operation
of an openMosix cluster. You should also be familiar with concepts such as IP
networking, routing, and address management. And, if you are so inclined, it
might be a good idea to be a little familiar with Linux packet filtering
(netfilter). If you are not confident in these areas, then acquire some playtime,
Redhat and openMosix RPMs.
It is recommended that you plan your cluster before you set out
to install it. This practice will help you to avoid complicated, time consuming
and expensive surprises. While this advice seems contrary to the ad-hoc intent
of CHAOS, production deployments will serve well with some planning.
Initialising your first CHAOS/openMosix cluster
To get your cluster running immediately, you will need to
perform the following four major steps.
1. Some minor preparation work must come first;
o Download the CHAOS-1.6 ISO image from the
CHAOS web site
o Burn the ISO image to CDROM media
(preferably a business-card CD)
o Acquire i586 (or better) PCs; each with
CDROM drive, ethernet NIC and a console
2. Then, for each PC (node) you can perform the
following;
o Ensure that this PC is capable of
booting from its CDROM drive (check the BIOS configuration)
o Boot the node with the CHAOS disc
o If your LAN has dynamic IP allocation;
- Press Enter
(optionally; select "n1" if this is the first node)
o If your LAN is statically allocated;
- Press F5 for help
(and removing the boot prompt timeout)
- Enter the boot
command shown, but populate the correct IP detail for this node
o If the node's hardware is supported
then within 15 seconds the CDROM will eject the disc
o As soon as that disc is ejected, you
can repeat the process on the next node using the same disc
3. If your nodes are on differing LANs, then to join
the cluster from all bar the first node;
o At the command prompt of the new node,
enter; tyd --master 192.168.1.12
where 192.168.1.12 is
substituted with the IP address of the first node
Without any hardware issues, your first cluster should have
two nodes running within about 10-15 minutes of downloading the CHAOS ISO
image.
Testing the cluster to validate its operational state
If you've followed through the instructions in the previous
section, then you should have a running cluster. There are two very
useful applications built into CHAOS that will help to validate the cluster's
operational status and to demonstrate the power of the openMosix cluster
that you have at your fingertips; An openMosix performance monitoring
tool and a test application.
mosmon - The openMosix performance monitoring tool
"mosmon" is really useful. Take the time out to play with
mosmon, and to experiment with its display options. Once you've started
mosmon, you should see all of the nodes in your cluster listed
horizontally, with their respective load graphed vertically.
o At the command prompt of any
node, enter; mosmon
testapp - The test application "testapp" is a
tiny little program with one job; testapp is going to increment a
counter until it expires. Despite processing at millions of cycles per
second, the testapp incrementer will run for a very long time before
it completes - making it the ideal openMosix cluster candidate. As
you launch testapp instances you will see a huge load spike on the
testapp "home" node, before it manages to offload (migrate)
testapp instances to free nodes.
o At the command prompt of any
other node, enter; testapp
do this for at least
one testapp per node in your cluster
When you've finished your experiment, you can exit mosmon
by pressing 'q', and you can terminate the testapp instances from the
node that they were launched from (the home node) using ps
and kill (as per regular unix-land tools and practices).
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