A description of the Beowulf cluster, from the original "how-to", which was published by Jacek Radajewski and Douglas Eadline under the
Linux Documentation Project in 1998:
Operating systems PCs a number of
Linux distributions, and at least one
BSD, are designed for building Beowulf clusters. These include: •
MOSIX, geared toward computationally intensive, IO-low applications •
Rocks Cluster Distribution, latest 2017 •
DragonFly BSD OS, latest 2024 •
PelicanHPC OS, based on
Debian Live. Although it had a long period without major releases after 2016, development has resumed, with updates released in later years, including recent activity reported in 2025. The following are no longer maintained: •
Kerrighed (EOL: 2013) •
OpenMosix (EOL: 2008), forked from MOSIX •
ClusterKnoppix OS, forked from
Knoppix OS, forked from
OpenMosix •
Quantian OS latest 2006, a
live DVD with scientific applications, remastered from
Knoppix A cluster can be set up by using Knoppix bootable CDs in combination with
OpenMosix. The computers will automatically link together, without need for complex configurations, to form a Beowulf cluster using all CPUs and
RAM in the cluster. A Beowulf cluster is scalable to a nearly unlimited number of computers, limited only by the overhead of the network. Provisioning of operating systems and other software for a Beowulf Cluster can be automated using software, such as
Open Source Cluster Application Resources. OSCAR installs on top of a standard installation of a supported Linux distribution on a cluster's head node. == See also ==