You can install Julia on that cluster from the gzipped tar 
ball: 
https://julialang.s3.amazonaws.com/bin/linux/x64/0.3/julia-0.3.9-linux-x86_64.tar.gz

into any directory for which you have write access.

--Pete

On Sunday, June 14, 2015 at 7:17:03 AM UTC-7, Daniel Carrera wrote:
>
> I never cease to be impressed by Julia's speed. I just wrote a test 
> program in Julia and Fortran 90 (it computes the gravitational force 
> between some planets). To my surprise, the Julia version was 7% faster than 
> Fortran.
>
> So... apparently one can write N-body codes with Julia.
>
> Suppose I wrote a simulation in Julia. What would be the best way to 
> deploy it to a distant computer cluster where I do not have root access? 
> The cluster runs Linux. Can I get a single stand-alone Julia binary that I 
> can just push to the cluster so I can run Julia programs there? The 
> advantage of a stand-alone binary is that I could include it in a zip file 
> and give it to my colleagues to try my program.
>
> Let me know if you have any suggestions.
>
> Cheers,
> Daniel.
> -- 
> When an engineer says that something can't be done, it's a code phrase 
> that means it's not fun to do.
>  

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