Hi Eric,
I think you'll be _very_ happy with Gromacs4, or the current CVS
version if you want to test that :-)
One problem is that "relative scaling" is a rather pointless measure,
since it will be better the slower the code is on a single CPU (less
time spent in communication). Our paral
As I understand it, Blue Matter is a very stripped down laboratory
code, so I think the scaling is the only large virtue that one would
want to acquire.
At 02:06 AM 4/7/2007, you wrote:
Eric Jakobsson wrote:
Not a direct response but a thought: Wouldn't it be wonderful to
have a code that co
Eric Jakobsson wrote:
Not a direct response but a thought: Wouldn't it be wonderful to have a
code that combined the best qualities of Gromacs and Blue Matter? Is it
possible to assemble a group or community of people to do that?
Erik L. has been in touch with IBM about their 3D FFT routines
Not a direct response but a thought: Wouldn't it be wonderful to
have a code that combined the best qualities of Gromacs and Blue
Matter? Is it possible to assemble a group or community of people to do that?
At 05:15 PM 4/3/2007, you wrote:
Content-class: urn:content-classes:message
Content-
Have a digg in the mailing list. I remember that someone has once shared...
On 4/4/2007 6:15 AM, Mike Hanby wrote:
Howdy,
We are bringing a one rack (1024 node) IBM Blue Gene/L system online.
I've been tasked with compiling Gromacs for the Blue Gene. We have the
XL compilers installed (bl
Howdy,
We are bringing a one rack (1024 node) IBM Blue Gene/L system online.
I've been tasked with compiling Gromacs for the Blue Gene. We have the
XL compilers installed (blrts_xlc / mpixlc, etc), so I'll be using those
rather than GNU.
Has anyone on here successfully cross compiled Gromac
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