I would think that you could use mosix (http://www.mosix.org/) for
something like this.  I have not tried this myself yet though.

Jeff


On Tue, 19 Mar 2002, Troy.A Johnson wrote:

> I think Bob is thinking of a kind of distributed
> processing more than clustering. Clustering
> seems (at least to me) to reduce the utility of
> the hardware used for other purposes. A
> distributed processing type that is less "life
> changing" for workstations is nice when you
> still want to use those workstation for other
> things.
>
> Examples would be distributed.net, Seti at Home
> (the search-for-aliens-in-static one), and
> programs like Pooch
> (http://daugerresearch.com/pooch/).
>
> Is that what you are thinking of Bob? A "pooch"
> for linux, or maybe a cross platform "puppie"? I'd
> like that...
>
> >>> chrome at real-time.com 03/19/02 11:51AM >>>
> On Tue, Mar 19, 2002 at 12:45:18AM -0600, Bob Tanner wrote:
> > I'm talking about distributing the compile of the kernel across idle boxes on
> > your network.
> 	it's possible that just building a beowulf cluster (which is what
> you're looking for) and substituting 'pmake' for 'make' will do the job for
> some problems.
> ...<snip>...
> > Something ala pvm. NOT like a cluster.
> 	pvm is what beowulf clustering uses (tho it could be that I'm
> equivocating here). you're probably thinking of other types of clustering;
> for redundancy or network load-balancing, which most certainly aren't
> appropriate here.
>
>
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