Summary on PC Cluster Software



Thanks to all that supplied information on software for parallel processing
 PC clusters.  Several people show interest in a summary so here it is.
 I was very pleased with the number of responses.
 It appears that there are several commercial products.
 GAUSSIAN with the GaussView GUI (not required)
 HTTP://WWW.gaussian.com
 Schrodinger has TITAN (GUI) and Jaguar.  TITAN is a SPARTAN GUI.
 HTTP://WWW.SCHRODINGER.COM
 Non-commercial products include
 GAMESS
 CHARM
 Peter Pulay's Parallel Quantum Solutions
 www.pqs-chem.com
 GROMACS parallel MD package
 http://md.chem.rug.nl/~gmx
 NWChem
 http://www.emsl.pnl.gov:2080/docs/nwchem/nwchem.html
 There are many useful links to pages discussing Beowulf clusters.  Again,
 Thanks to all,
 Jim
 =================
 http://www.beowulf-underground.org
 http://sal.kachinatech.com/
 These are two great sites that list a lot of applications that can run
 on a beowulf cluster.  You might also want to search the boewulf/extreme
 linux mailing list archives as many announcements of applications have
 been made over both.
 --
 Brian D. Haymore
 University of Utah
 Center for High Performance Computing
 155 South 1452 East RM 405
 Salt Lake City, Ut 84112-0190
 Email: brian()at()chpc.utah.edu - Phone: (801) 585-1755 - Fax: (801) 585-5366
 ===============================
 Hi Jim,
 I started a web site a couple of months back ( and haven't worked on it
 since )
 dealing with "Beowulf clusters for chemists" you may find some useful
 information there.
 http://www.chem.arizona.edu/theochem/beowulf
 check the "what chemists are doing with their clusters" link
 Hope this helps
 -Don
 --
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 Dr. Donald B. Kinghorn
 Theoretical and Computational Chemistry Group
 University of Arizona
 Tucson AZ 85721
 kinghorn()at()u.arizona.edu
 (520)621-6761
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 =======================================
 Hi Jim,
 for Quantum Chemistry software running under Linux on our Cluster,
 take a look at http://www.chm.tu-dresden.de/edv/soft-lin.html
 (sorry, in german; but in most cases Links to Homepages are included).
 For real parallel computation, GAUSSIAN and GAMESS should work
 (but with different parallelization tools; LINDA vs. MPI or TCGMSG).
 Instead of this, we are using all the programs sequentially,
 managed by an batch system in our Linux cluster.
 Matthias
 --
 Dr. Matthias Mann
 Fachrichtung Chemie der TU Dresden
 D-01069 Dresden, Mommsenstr. 13
 Tel.: +49 (351) 463-4286 / Fax: -7030
 Email: Matthias.Mann()at()chemie.tu-dresden.de
 =========================================
    Dr. Macmillan,
    Gaussian 98 is supported on this type of cluster.  We utilize the
 LINDA software from Scientific Computing Associates(SCA) to simulate shared
 memory and interprocess communication.  The combination of G98 + Linda
 scales quite well for HF, DFT, CI-singles and even MP2 energies and
 gradients.  We published a report about G94 on Cray T3E systems which
 demonstrates the scalability, of course the actual per CPU time varies
 by platform, in J. Comp. Chem. vol. 19, pp 1053 (1998) which will give
 you a good idea of what you can expect.
    The LINDA software is normally licensed on a per-process basis but
 we have made an arrangement with SCA which permits use of G98+Linda
 on any number of processors so it is a cost effective combination for
 this type of Parallel Cluster.
    If you would like a proper quote please send a request to
 fo()at()gaussian.com. If you have more specific technical questions let me know
 at help()at()gaussian.com.
 =======================================================
 Schrodinger markets JAGUAR for Linux.  Wavefunction markets TITAN, sort of
 Spartan with a hook to Jaguar,.. for NT, however.  JAGUAR V4/Linux will be
 out at end of month.  There is a Gui for it on the way.
 John McKelvey
 =======================================
 Well for semi-empirical and ab initio modeling there's GAMESS, Gaussian,
 and Jaguar that all run under linux. You might check out the site
 http://chpc06.ch.unito.it/chem_linux.html, this gives a good
 listing of
 software running on linux.
 hope this helps,
 -david
 David Reichert, Ph.D.
 Washington University School of Medicine
 510 S. Kingshighway, Campus Box 8225
 St Louis, MO 63110
 e-mail: reichertd()at()mir.wustl.edu
 voice: (314) 362-8461
 fax: (314) 362-9940
 ===========================================================
 Hello, James:
 For a good parallelized quantum package that is already optimized for PVM
 under Linux, I suggest the code from Peter Pulay's Parallel Quantum
 Solutions (www.pqs-chem.com).
 Best wishes,
 Brian Teppen
 =====================================
 Dear Dr. Macmillan:
 Since you are working in the Dept. of Chemistry I thinks at least you can
 use
 CHARMM and GAMESS with the Beowulf cluster!
 Please check the link listed below,
 http://www.lobos.nih.gov/apps_frame.html
 Joe
 HCHuang()at()uh.edu
 ==============================
 GROMACS parallel MD package
 http://md.chem.rug.nl/~gmx
 Groeten, David.
 ________________________________________________________________________
 Dr. David van der Spoel		Biomedical center, Dept. of Biochemistry
 s-mail:	Husargatan 3, Box 576,  75123 Uppsala, Sweden
 e-mail: spoel()at()xray.bmc.uu.se	www: http://zorn.bmc.uu.se/~spoel
 phone:	46 18 471 4205		fax: 46 18 511 755
 ==================================================
 If the cluster is reasonably big, try NWChem. Single-node performance is
 not impressive, but it's very efficiently parallelized. Runs on Linux,
 and is free (subject to a user agreement). Have a look at
 http://www.emsl.pnl.gov:2080/docs/nwchem/nwchem.html
 Don't know if parallel Gaussian is available for Linux. Check their web
 page (www.gaussian.com).
 Btw., I think it IS of general interest, so you might summarize some of
 the replies you get.
 Regards,
   Herbert
 ==============================================
 ***********************************************
 James G. Macmillan
 1419 Laurel Cir.
 Cedar Falls, IA 50613
 E-Mail macmillan()at()uni.edu
 Web   http:\\www.cns.uni.edu\~macmilla
 *********************************************
 "Making good wine is a science, making fine wine is an art" - Robert
 Mondavi