Related Web Sites


Old LoBoS Web Pages


Parallel Computing Resources

  • Cluster Hardware and Design
    • Beowulf.org has an extensive list of cluster resources, as well as a guide to building your own Beowulf cluster.
    • Engineering a Beowulf-style Compute Cluster is an online book with good information on cluster design.
    • Myricom is a company that produces Myrinet, a high-speed, highly-scalable cluster interconnect technology.
    • InfiniBand is an emerging set of network standards for high-performance computing.
    • Topspin produces InfiniBand network gear.
    • Foundry Networks provides the high-performance ethernet switches which LoBoS uses.
  • Parallel Programming Libraries and Other Resources

Cluster Software

  • Application Software
    • CHARMM is a customizable, parallelized, multi-platform molecular modelling program.
    • A Tutorial for CHARMM by Laboratory of Computational Biology staff.
    • A Web-portal for CHARMM also by Laboratory of Computational Biology staff.
    • NAMD is a parallel molecular dynamics code designed for high performance simulations.
    • MPICH is an open-source implementation of MPI for Unix and Windows systems.
    • PVM is another set of parallel communications libraries, similar to MPI.
    • For benchmarking, HPL is a freely-available implementation of Linpack.
  • Administration and Monitoring Software
    • LoBoS uses Torque, an extension of OpenPBS, as its batch processing system.
    • NAGIOS is a flexible, extensible distributed monitoring tool.
    • Ganglia is a distributed monitoring tool designed specifically for clusters.

Other Clusters of Note

  • Biowulf is another cluster at NIH. Some old LoBoS nodes are now part of Biowulf.
  • Vrana at the Slovenian National Institute of Chemistry, which is run by Milan Hodoscek, who did early work on LoBoS.
  • The Beowulf Project at the Center for Advanced Computing Research at CalTech.
  • The Hoffman Cluster at UCLA.
  • Avalon is a Beowulf at Los Alamos National Laboratory which uses HP Alphas instead of Intel processors.
  • MadDog at the Theoretical Physics group at the University of Manchester.

Links compiled by Tim Miller, with the assistance of the Computational Biophysics Section staff.