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     Contents 
 
- 
 - beowulf
 -  See http://www.beowulf.org and links
thereupon for a full description of the beowulf project, access to the
beowulf mailing list, and more.
 - Amdahl
 -  Amdahl's law was first formulated by Gene
Amdahl (working for IBM at the time) in 1967.  It (and many other
details of interest to a beowulf designer or parallel program designer)
is discussed in detail in the following three works, among many others.
 - Amalsi
 -  G. S. Amalsi and A. Gottlieb, Highly Parallel Computing (2nd edition), Benjamin/Cummings, 1994.
 - Foster
 -  I. Foster, Designing and Building Parallel
Programs, Addison-Wesley, 1995.  Also see the online version of the
book at Argonne National Labs, http://www-unix.mcs.anl.gov/dbpp/.
 - Kumar
 -  V. Kumar, A. Grama, A. Gupta, and G.  Karypis,
Introduction to Parallel Computing, Design and Analysis of
Algorithms, Benjamin/Cummings, 1994.
 - lmbench
 -  A microbenchmark toolset developed by Larry
McVoy and Carl Staelin of Bitmover, Incorporated.  GPL plus special
restrictions.  See http://www.bitmover.com/lmbench/.
 - netperf
 -  A network performance microbenchmark suite
developed under the auspices of the Hewlett-Packard company.  It was
written by a number of people, starting with Rick Jones.  Non-GPL open
source license.  See http://www.netperf.org/.
 - cpu-rate
 -  A crude tool for measuring ``bogomflops''
written by Robert G. Brown and adapted for this paper.  GPL. See http://www.phy.duke.edu/brahma.
 - Eden
 -  The ``Eden'' beowulf consists of lucifer,
abel, adam, eve, and sometimes caine and lilith.  It lives in my home
office and is used for prototyping and development.
 - profiling
 -  Robert G. Brown, The Beowulf Design:
COTS Parallel Clusters and Supercomputers, tutorial presented for the
Extreme Linux Track at the 1999 Linux Expo in Raleigh, NC.  Linked to
http://www.phy.duke.edu/brahma, along with several other
introductory papers and tools of interest to beowulf developers.
 - ATLAS
 -  Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Systems,
developed by Jack Dongarra, et. al. at the Innovative Computing
Laboratory of the University of Tennessee.  Non-GPL open source license.
See http://www.netlib.org/atlas.
 
Robert G. Brown
2004-05-24