From: Mike H. <mho...@gr...> - 2003-08-25 23:39:24
|
For this to work, you need to use channel bonding in the Linux kernel to bring the two network interfaces into a single virtual interface and then use that virtual interface for your Chromium access. (There are lots of articles on the net about how to setup channel bonding in general). This won't provide a direct split down the middle between your nodes, but should provide a better dynamic load balance for all around access. If you really want to do a fixed node split, you could run a replicate SPU into two different tilesort SPUs, one assigned per interface and then sorting to the correct tiles. -Mike nimesh.i.amin.1 wrote: >I am running RedHat 8. I have two NICs in my application node. Of course >I am having problems with latency and bandwidth, so I wanted to try to >assign half of the nodes to one NIC and the other half to the second NIC. >When I do regular file transfers, bandwidth will be supplied by the other >NIC as required. When I run CR, configuration is done properly, however, >when it's actually running, it only utilized one NIC. Is it hard carded >to only look at one NIC in the CR code as of right now? Has anyone done >this type of setup yet? Just wanna find out what the problem is before I >start to hack through code. Thanks. > >===================== > Nimesh Amin > Computer Science > & Mathematics > Purdue University > na...@pu... >===================== > > >------------------------------------------------------- >This SF.net email is sponsored by: VM Ware >With VMware you can run multiple operating systems on a single machine. >WITHOUT REBOOTING! Mix Linux / Windows / Novell virtual machines >at the same time. Free trial click here:http://www.vmware.com/wl/offer/358/0 >_______________________________________________ >Chromium-users mailing list >Chr...@li... >https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/chromium-users > > |