Distributed and parallel computing without DCS
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Is there a way to perform distributed computing across multiple computers without licensing Distributed Computing Server (DCS)? It is implied that Sun Grid Engine may be used without DCS, but my attempts to integrate torque+maui produce licensing errors. Which schedulers/resource managers are possible without the quite expensive (relative term, of course) DCS?
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More Answers (4)
Thomas
on 26 Oct 2011
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 29 May 2015
Hi Chuck,
In order to perform distributed computing across multiple computers you need the DCS license. We have DCS running with the Sun Grid Engine on our Cheaha cluster at UAB. The implication that SGE may be used with out the DCS is not correct. What I think was implied was that - You can use the SGE scheduler instead of the scheduler provided by the MATHWORKS (MATHWORKS job manager) along with the DCS.
Grid Engine Family:
Grid Engine
Sun N1 Grid Engine
Sample integration scripts are available with the
MATLAB Distributed Computing Server installation.
In short- you cannot use the distributed computing without the DCS.
You can use the parallel computing toolbox on your local multicore machine to use upto 12 workers to run in parallel with R2011b.
If you need help integrating DCS with SGE there are sample scripts available or you can contact MATHWORKS support.
Jason Ross
on 26 Oct 2011
1 vote
To add a little additional information: If you want to use Torque/PBS, you can do so with the direct integration from the Parallel menu, or using scripts similar to the ones for SGE if your environment won't allow the use of the direct integration.
Thomas and Anthony have already covered the licensing issues fairly thoroughly.
1 Comment
Ah So
on 23 Nov 2011
Hi Jason, per your above additional info, does it means it is technically possible to use the the Parallel menu of PCT to directly integrate with some scheduler such as SGE or grid technology without DCS? If so, is there any document / URL could provide very details. Many thx for sharing the info
Konrad Malkowski
on 29 Oct 2011
1 vote
Starting with MATLAB R2010b MATLAB Compiler allows you to compile MATLAB code containing PARFOR and SPMD running on local scheduler.
The same limitations as with PCT local scheduler apply to compiled MATLAB applications.
1 Comment
Martijn
on 29 May 2015
This is not correct. The feature was added in release R2011a. See the MATLAB Compiler release notes:
Chuck
on 27 Oct 2011
0 votes
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