Re: Scaling noise
From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Mon Sep 08 2003 - 03:33:11 EST
Larry McVoy <lm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> On Sun, Sep 07, 2003 at 09:47:58PM -0700, Stephen Satchell wrote:
> > At 05:57 PM 9/7/2003 -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> > >That's not "a machine" that's ~1150 machines on a network. This business
> > >of describing a bunch of boxes on a network as "a machine" is nonsense.
> >
> > Then you haven't been keeping up with Open-source projects, or the
> > literature.
>
> Err, I'm in that literature, dig a little, you'll find me. I'm quite
> familiar with clustering technology. While it is great that people are
> wiring up lots of machines and running MPI or whatever on them, they've
> been doing that for decades. It's only a recent thing that they started
> calling that "a machine". That's marketing, and it's fine marketing,
> but a bunch of machines, a network, and a library does not a machine make.
Oh so you need cache coherency to make it a machine. That being the only
difference between that and a NUMA box.
Although I will state that there is a lot more that goes into such
a system than a network, and a library. At least there is a lot more
that goes into the manageable version of one.
> Not to me it doesn't. I want to be able to exec a proces and have it land
> anywhere on the "machine", any CPU, I want controlling tty semantics,
> if I have 2300 processes in one process group then when I hit ^Z they
> had all better stop. Etc.
Oh wait none of that comes with cache coherency. So the difference
cannot be cache coherency.
> A collection of machines that work together is called a network of
> machines, it's not one machine, it's a bunch of them. There's nothing
> wrong with getting a lot of use out of a pile of networked machines,
> it's a great thing. But it's no more a machine than the internet is
> a machine.
Cool so the SGI Ultrix is not a machine. Nor is the SMP box over in
my lab. They are separate machines wired together with a network, and
so I better start calling them a network of machines.
As far as I can tell which pile of hardware to call a machine
is a difference that makes no difference. Marketing as you put it.
The only practical difference would seem to be what kind of problems
you think are worth solving for a collection of hardware. By calling
it a single machine I am saying I think it is worth solving the single
system image problem. By refusing to call it a machine you seem to
think it is a class of hardware which is not worth paying attention to.
I do think it is a class of hardware that is worth solving the hard
problems for. And I will continue to call that pile of hardware a
machine until I give up on that.
I admit the hard problems have not yet been solved but the solutions
are coming.
Eric
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