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submitted 1 year ago by xylan@kbin.social to c/linux@kbin.social

I've been running an HPC system for a science group for a while now and have built a couple of different systems based on common HPC infrastructures (ROCKS or Open HPC). These have been built on top of the rebuilt RHEL distros (mostly CentOS), but I don't really need the level of stability that these provide and would actually like the sort of updates that you get from something like CentOS stream, so this seems like a time to try this.

The problem is that I haven't found an HPC framework which would natively support this so I'm potentially going to have to roll my own. I don't need anything fancy just some way to automatically deploy nodes and set up slurm to get jobs queued.

Any pointers to suitable frameworks or tools which would help with this and which aren't tied to older distros?

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[-] SFaulken@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

I'm not entirely certain about the actual HPC stuff, but there's no good reason CentOS Stream wouldn't do what you need.

[-] xylan@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, conceptually I like it. A while back I used to run my systems on Fedora which was great in that I always had the latest of everything, but doing updates every 6 months got tedious. Stream seems like a good compromise on the way to that.

[-] SFaulken@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

I mean, if you know the software you need to have, to make it work on RHEL, It might take a bit of work on your part, but I can't imagine getting it installed on CentOS Stream will be that onerous a task.

this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2023
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