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< < | Nevis Linux Cluster Node Names |
> > | Nevis Linux Cluster Node Names |
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These are the names of the computers in the Nevis Linux Cluster. |
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- the systems on the Nevis condor batch farm;
- the student boxes;
- machines that are not part of the cluster (e.g., Windows machines, laptops, some ATLAS, DOE, and Neutrino systems).
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| Most Linux machines at Nevis are typically used by a particular working group; the student boxes are the main exception, but there are other shared workstations noted below.
Each group has an informal naming convention for its machines. The list below includes the different groups with machines in the cluster, the basis for the names, and description of each Linux machine normally used by that group. |
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| ATLAS |
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| Mostly named after members of the Romanov dynasty
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karthur |
ATLAS/D0 workgroup server |
Dual 3.2 GHz Xeon |
4 GB |
2.5 TB |
Arthur Pendragon, Once and Future King |
elecsim |
Electronics shop chip-design workstation |
2.4 Intel Xeon |
24 GB |
800 GB |
Sometimes we have to use a practical name |
elecdesign |
Electronics shop chip-design workstation |
2.8 GHz Pentium 4 |
1 GB |
160 GB |
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| DOE |
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| Named for Chinese imperial dynasties (pronunciation guide )
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| Neutrino |
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| Named after streets in the area of Columbia University
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westside |
Neutrino file server |
Quad 2.27 GHz Four-core Xeon |
12 GB |
14 TB |
amsterdam |
Neutrino file server |
AMD Opteron 6128 |
32 GB |
22 TB |
bleeker |
Neutrino file server |
AMD Opteron 6128 |
32 GB |
22 TB |
typo when naming; missing a 'c' |
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| VERITAS |
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| Named after characters in the Earthsea books by Ursula K. LeGuin
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tehanu |
VERITAS workgroup server |
Dual 2.27 GHz Xeon quad-core |
12 GB |
13 TB |
Tehanu is the fourth book in the series |
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tehanu |
VERITAS workgroup server |
Dual 2.27 GHz Xeon quad-core |
53 GB |
13 TB |
Tehanu is the fourth book in the series |
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vetch |
VERITAS file server |
Four 8-core AMD 6272 processors |
64 GB |
20 TB |
A friend of Ged |
ged |
VERITAS file server |
Four 8-core AMD 6272 processors |
64 GB |
20 TB |
Ged is the main protagonist of the first book |
serret |
VERITAS file server |
Four 8-core AMD 6272 processors |
64 GB |
20 TB |
Daughter of the Lord of Re Albi |
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| Shared between workgroups |
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| Named (initially) for characters and locations from the Harry Potter novels by J. K. Rowling. (The student boxes are also shared, but they're described separately.) The reason for mixed naming scheme is these systems were at one time dedicated to specific workgroups.
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lexington |
Shared client |
2.8 GHz Core 2 Duo |
2 GB |
60 GB |
Lexington Avenue in New York City |
leonardo |
Shared client |
2 GHz Pentium Dual-core |
2 GB |
130 GB |
After Leonardo da Vinci , an Italian inventor and artist. |
excalibur |
D0 client |
2.66 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo |
2 GB |
60 GB |
The legendary sword of karthur... er... King Arthur. |
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| Administrative machines |
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| Named for historical figures who made important contributions to Western thought
Name |
Function |
CPU |
Memory |
Disk |
Derived from |
hypatia |
central admin server |
Four AMD Opteron 6128 (32 cores total) |
32 GB |
4 TB |
Hypatia of Alexandria (d. 415), a teacher and philosopher who was killed for advocating experimental science and other heresies. |
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hermes |
Condor, DNS , and print server |
Dual-core 1.86 GHz Xeon |
1 GB |
128 GB |
Hermes was the messenger of the gods; a god of intellect, invention, travelers, communication, and many other attributes. |
franklin |
mail server |
Xen virtual machine |
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), who was (among many other things) the first Postmaster General of the United Sates. |
ada |
web server |
Xen virtual machine |
Ada Byron , Countess of Lovelace (1815-1852), the founder of scientific computing. |
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Why the funny names? |
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< < | Well, there's the sheer intellectual over-indulgence of it all, but there's also a serious reason: the function of a given computer can change over time; for example, a computer that used to be Jones' Linux desktop client may become an FTP server in the future. If the computer's name was jonespc or d0pc3 , we'd want to change it to ftpserver or something like that. If the computer's name was hanuman.nevis.columbia.edu , there'd be no reason to change it, nor any need to update the various databases of names (/etc/hosts , NIS, DNS, etc.). |
> > | Well, there's the sheer intellectual over-indulgence of it all, but there's also a serious reason: the function of a given computer can change over time; for example, a computer that used to be Jones' Linux desktop client may become an FTP server in the future. If the computer's name was jonespc or d0pc3, we'd want to change it to ftpserver or something like that. If the computer's name was hanuman.nevis.columbia.edu, there'd be no reason to change it, nor any need to update the various databases of names (/etc/hosts, NIS, DNS, etc.). |
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Obviously, we have this luxury because there are relatively few computers at Nevis. We can configure them individually and know each one by name. If we had a hundred boxes, this would be impossible.
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