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ODU HPC Environment

Welcome to the ODU HPC Systems


High Performance Computing (HPC) is the use of computer hardware and
software systems to do more computing in less real-time. HPC can be
achieved through a combination of advanced processor architecture,
parallel processing, and the availability of large amounts of memory and
disk space. To take full advantage of the advanced architecture of the
ODU HPC systems, your application must be developed or configured to
run in parallel mode. Parallel computing is the act of dividing and
distributing one large computational task into many smaller and relatively
independent tasks that are run simultaneously on different processors.



  • The HPC SMP (Symmetric Multi-Processor) Environment

  • The Sun SMP systems are configured as a single system image. This
    architecture allows a researcher to write a program that uses all
    processors and all available memory. Several users can simultaneously
    run, and each user can specify the number of processors required for
    the job. These systems supports two of these parallel software development
    standards: MPI (Message Passing Interface) and OpenMP.


    These SUN SMP systems are accessed through a front end job submittal
    login server, sol-login.lions2.odu.edu. Remote login is required to
    access a login host. The compute jobs on the compute resources
    are managed by the Sun Grid Engine (SGE) workload manager. The home
    directories are managed by AFS, using Kerberos.



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