Difference between revisions of "Batch Schedulers"

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* [http://wiki.gridengine.info/wiki/index.php/Main_Page Grid Engine Wiki ] - Links and discussion about Grid Engine
 
* [http://wiki.gridengine.info/wiki/index.php/Main_Page Grid Engine Wiki ] - Links and discussion about Grid Engine
  
HPCTeraGridPNNLSandiaUSCOSCNCSA[http://www.clusterresources.com/pages/products/torque-resource-manager.php Torque] - TORQUE is an open source resource manager providing control over batch jobs and distributed compute nodes. It is a community effort based on the original *PBS project and, with more than 1,200 patches, has incorporated significant advances in the areas of scalability, fault tolerance, and feature extensions contributed by NCSA, OSC, USC , the U.S. Dept of Energy, Sandia, PNNL, U of Buffalo, TeraGrid, and many other leading edge HPC organizations
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[http://www.clusterresources.com/pages/products/torque-resource-manager.php Torque] - TORQUE is an open source resource manager providing control over batch jobs and distributed compute nodes. It is a community effort based on the original *PBS project and, with more than 1,200 patches, has incorporated significant advances in the areas of scalability, fault tolerance, and feature extensions contributed by NCSA, OSC, USC , the U.S. Dept of Energy, Sandia, PNNL, U of Buffalo, TeraGrid, and many other leading edge HPC organizations

Revision as of 20:00, 23 March 2006

Sun Grid Engine - SGE is an openly available Batch Scheduler. The Grid Engine project is an open source community effort to facilitate the adoption of distributed computing solutions. Sponsored by Sun Microsystems and hosted by CollabNet, the Grid Engine project provides enabling distributed resource management software for wide ranging requirements from compute farms to grid computing.

Torque - TORQUE is an open source resource manager providing control over batch jobs and distributed compute nodes. It is a community effort based on the original *PBS project and, with more than 1,200 patches, has incorporated significant advances in the areas of scalability, fault tolerance, and feature extensions contributed by NCSA, OSC, USC , the U.S. Dept of Energy, Sandia, PNNL, U of Buffalo, TeraGrid, and many other leading edge HPC organizations