Title
Virtualization for Computational Scientists
Abstract
The fun all began in May of 1999, when VMware launched VMware Workstation, a product that lets you run multiple operating systems simultaneously on your desktop computer. In truth, the story begins much earlier with the VM OS concept, which was pioneered (like many things) by IBM in 1960 but eventually perfected by others. The idea behind virtualization is simple. You can run multiple OSs simultaneously and share the CPU, memory, and peripherals among them. In this article, we're not going to cover what virtualization is per se. This would easily require two articles, and the actual ideas behind virtualization are well explained elsewhere. And besides, we've already covered the use of virtualization in this column for use in maintaining experimental computing laboratories. Instead, we'll focus here on a fairly simple use case that's likely to be of interest to our readers: setting up your own mini compute cluster to use for developing and testing high-performance computing applications.
Year
DOI
Venue
2010
10.1109/MCSE.2010.92
Computing in Science and Engineering
Keywords
Field
DocType
computational scientists,great experimentation,different operating system,operating system,virtual reality,servers,use case,virtualization,visualization,linux,computational science,multiplication operator
Virtualization,IBM,Virtual machine,Hardware virtualization,Computer science,Workstation,Full virtualization,Computational science,Operating system,Thin provisioning,Computer cluster
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
12
4
1521-9615
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
5
0.66
3
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
George K. Thiruvathukal17429.16
Konrad Hinsen212645.16
Konstantin Laufer3999.95
Joe Kaylor481.68