Hi all, I need some quick pointers on a question posed by one of my clients; They have a significant (to them) investment in RHEL, on x86 hardware. They would like to leverage these resources better for their CPU-intensive jobs, and I am their go-to guy for recommendations. That said, I now turn to you guys for answers to a couple things that Google was less than clear on. So far, I only know of Mosix, Beowulf, Sun Grid Engine, and RHEL Clustering. Are there others in production? The client's software is all 3rd party, closed-source, but built for, and currently running on, SMP RHEL. This means a cluster solution is probably not going to work for me, right? So no RHEL or Beowulf clusters. Or hot grits. ;) (Please forgive the /. reference, I couldn't help it.) Now that leaves me with grids; I think if Sun delivers on what they promise in their PR, it will be my 1st choice. Do any of you have experience with their Open-Source Grid Engine on x86 RHEL? Does it even run on RHEL3 machines? Their faq is awfully vague on that point. If so, do you have horror stories? Is it smooth sailing? I would love the advice of some seasoned vets to help me decide here... Finally, MOSIX. It seems to have a long history, back to PDP-11s & Bell Labs, but it seems to be an educational system, and not aimed at the enterprise level. Am I wrong? Your valuable input is greatly appreciated; Regards, Gavin McDonald ======================== EVI Logistic Enterprises email: me@xxxxxxxxxxxx phone: (604) 313-3845 -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list