Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!mips!decwrl!bacchus.pa.dec.com!deccrl!wojcik From: wojcik@crl.dec.com (Theodore Wojcik) Newsgroups: comp.unix.large Subject: Re: Survey Keywords: Hola! Message-ID: <1990Sep10.153946.7269@crl.dec.com> Date: 10 Sep 90 15:39:46 GMT References: <6f7y02Ubc6wm01@amdahl.uts.amdahl.com> <25894@boulder.Colorado.EDU> Sender: news@crl.dec.com (USENET News System) Reply-To: wojcik@crl.dec.com Organization: DEC Cambridge Research Lab Lines: 46 In article , richard@locus.com (Richard M. Mathews) writes: |> huntting@boulder.Colorado.EDU (Brad Huntting) writes: |> |>..... |> It is my understanding that this group is for discussions of Unix on large |> machines (how large is large?). I'd be interested in starting things off |> by finding out what large machines and what versions of Unix you have out |> there. For what do you use these systems? |> |>..... |> |> What other large systems are out there? What sorts of problems do you |> have that you feel are unique to users of large systems? |> My feeling is that the problems associated with large clusters of workstations are as difficult and perhaps more complex than those associated with large single machines. The subjects discussed here are likely to be interesting to both . I'd like to suggest that the key is "large installation" and keep away from what exactly constitutes one. When you have one, you know it. As the original proposal stated: comp.unix.large Unix on mainframes and in large networks ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I guess the point I'm trying to make is that there isn't any single attribute that makes an installation "large". By their very nature, mainframes usually have big user communities and a big farm of disks. By the same token, large clusters of workstations generally have big user communities and a disk server with a big farm of disks. It's my feeling that the two styles of computing have more in things in commmon than not. FWIW. |> Richard M. Mathews |> Locus Computing Corporation |> richard@locus.com |> lcc!richard@seas.ucla.edu |> ...!{uunet|ucla-se|turnkey}!lcc!richard -- Ted Wojcik, (wojcik@crl.dec.com), Systems Manager Digital Equipment Corporation Cambridge Research Lab 1 Kendall Sq. Bldg. 700 Flr. 2 Cambridge, MA 02139, USA (617)621-6652