From #CentOSConnect: @adrianreber talked about using OpenHPC to run HPC workloads on multiple distributions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTvWE1ID0sw&list=PLuRtbOXpVDjDCM16tT5KHPbz3_Fy0vNzR&index=12
From #CentOSConnect: @adrianreber talked about using OpenHPC to run HPC workloads on multiple distributions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTvWE1ID0sw&list=PLuRtbOXpVDjDCM16tT5KHPbz3_Fy0vNzR&index=12
Listening to Adrian Reber of #Redhat talking at @centos Connect about:
#OpenHPC - Running on Multiple Distributions
https://cfp.fedoraproject.org/centos-connect-2025/talk/9TCMKB/
I'm not an #HPC guy, but many of my friends and syslog-ng guys are, so I follow these topics closely 😉
Next at CentOS Connect (11:00 UTC): Adrian Reber shows how OpenHPC allows high performance computing on multiple distros.
For anyone using #OpenHPC for their cluster and wants to run @almalinux instead of #rocky, check out my template on GitHub:
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So what is everyone using to manage their clusters today? I have to redeploy an older cluster and am most familiar with #xcat but in the end that seems like using a sledgehammer to hang a picture. I am looking at #openhpc and have used it in the past and it seems like a more lightweight option. I'm looking at ~70 nodes with no GPU (at present).