OpenHPC

OpenHPC is a set of community driven FOSS tools for Linux based HPC. OpenHPC does not have specific hardware requirements. [2]

OpenHPC
Initial releaseNovember 12, 2015 (2015-11-12) [1]
Stable release2.0 (October 6, 2020 (2020-10-06)) [±]
Repositoryhttps://github.com/openhpc
Operating systemCentOS, SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, OpenSUSE Leap
Platformx86_64, aarch64
TypeCluster software
LicenseFree software (Apache_License and other licenses)
Websiteopenhpc.community

History

A birds-of-a-feather panel discussion titled "Community Supported HPC Repository & Management Framework" convened at the 2015 edition of the International Supercomputing Conference. The panel discussed the common software components necessary to build linux compute clusters and solicited feedback on community interest in such a project.[3] Following the response, the OpenHPC project was announced at SC 2015 under the auspices of the Linux Foundation. [4][5]

Releases

VersionDate
2.0October 6, 2020
1.3.9November 12, 2019
1.3.8June 11, 2019
1.3.7March 14, 2019
1.3.6November 07, 2018
1.3.5June 13, 2018
1.3.4April 02, 2018
1.3.3November 08, 2017
1.3.2September 07, 2017
1.3.1June 16, 2017
1.3March 31, 2017
1.2.1January 24, 2017
1.2November 12, 2016
1.1.1June 21, 2016
1.1April 18, 2016
1.0.1February 05, 2016
1.0November 12, 2015

[6]

Design

OpenHPC provides an integrated and tested collection of software components that, along with a supported standard Linux distribution, can be used to implement a full-featured compute cluster. Components span the entire HPC software ecosystem including provisioning and system administration tools, resource management, I/O services, development tools, numerical libraries, and performance analysis tools. The architecture of OpenHPC is intentionally modular to allow end users to pick and choose from the provided components, as well as to foster a community of open contribution.[7] The project provides recipes for building clusters using CentOS (v7.6) and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (v12sp4) on x86_64 as well as aarch64 architectures.[8]

See also

References


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