Thursday, November 7, 2019
Computer Clusters essays
Computer Clusters essays    Computer clustering involves the use of multiple hardware, typically     personal computers (PCs) or UNIX workstations, storage devices, and     redundant interconnections, to form what appears to users as a single     integrated system (Cluster computing). Clustering has been available since     the 1980s when it was used in Digital Equipment Corp.'s VMS system. Today,     most leading hardware and software companies support clustering because of     its demand for parallel processing, batch processing, load balancing and           Parallel processing is the processing of program instructions by     dividing them among multiple processors with the objective of running a     program in less time.  Parallel processing is normally applied for     rendering and high computational based applications.  Rather than using     expensive specialized supercomputers for parallel processing, implementers     have begun using a large cluster of small commodity servers.  Each server     runs its own operating system, to take a number of jobs, process them, and     send the output to the primary system (Grama, 2003).  Clusters provide the     ability to handle a large task in small bits, or lots and lots of small     tasks across an entire cluster, making an entire system more affordable and           The  first PC cluster to be described in scientific literature was     named Beowulf and was developed in 1994 at the NASA Goddard Space Flight     Center (Beowulf clusters compared to Base One's batch job servers).     Beowulf initially consisted of sixteen PCs, standard Ethernet, and Linux     with modifications and achieved seventy million floating point operations     per second. For only $40,000 in hardware, Beowulf produced the processing     power of a small supercomputer costing about $400,000 at that time. By     1996, researchers had achieved one billion floating point operations per     second at a cost of less than $50,000. Later, in 1999, the University of    ...     
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