40%
01.08.2012
-headers x86_64 2.12-1.47.el6_2.9 sl-security 597 k
kernel-headers x86_64 2.6.32-220.23.1.el6
39%
22.05.2012
:
Scientific Linux 6.2
2.6.32-220.4.1.el6.x86_64 kernel
GigaByte MAA78GM-US2H motherboard
AMD Phenom II X4 920 CPU (four cores)
8GB of memory (DDR2-800)
The OS and boot drive are on an IBM DTLA
39%
21.08.2012
just two nodes: test1, which is the master node, and n0001, which is the first compute node):
[laytonjb@test1 ~]$ pdsh -w test1,n0001 uptime
test1: 18:57:17 up 2:40, 5 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00
39%
07.10.2014
by the process
12m
12MB
S
Status of process
R
S
= sleeping, R
= running, Z
= zombie
%CPU
Percent CPU being used by the process on a per-CPU basis
38%
25.02.2013
/s r/s w/s rMB/s wMB/s avgrq-sz avgqu-sz await r_await w_await svctm %util
md1 0.00 0.00 0.04 0.05 0.00 0.00 8.17 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
38%
01.08.2012
| 54 kB 00:00
(2/7): perl-5.10.1-119.el6_1.1.x86_64.rpm | 10 MB 00:08
(3/7): perl-Module-Pluggable-3.90-119.el6
38%
25.03.2020
---------------- -------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------- -------------------------- ---------------- --------
/dev/nvme0n1 152e778212a62015 Linux 1 21.00 TB / 21.00 TB 4 KiB + 0 B 5.4.12-0
You are now able to read and write from and to /dev
38%
07.01.2014
/laytonjb/TEST/SOURCE.full
./
Open-MPI-SC13-BOF.pdf
PrintnFly_Denver_SC13.pdf
easybuild_Python-BoF-SC12-lightning-talk.pdf
sent 12.31M bytes received 72 bytes 24.61M bytes/sec
total size is 12.31M speedup is 1.00
You can
38%
18.07.2013
buffered disk reads: 616 MB in
3.00 seconds = 205.03 MB/sec
$ hdparm -T /dev/sda
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 6292 MB in
2.00 seconds = 3153.09 MB/sec
If this were a spinning disk, you would also
38%
11.04.2016
/s wMB/s avgrq-sz ...
sdb 0.00 28.00 1.00 259.00 0.00 119.29 939.69 ...
Parallelism
Multiple computers can access enterprise storage, and multiple threads can access