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Condor at Washington and Lee University
Condor is a high-throughput computing system that is made available to Washington and Lee students and faculty by the Computer Science department. It is administered by Garrett Koller under the supervision of Dr. Joshua Stough.
What is Condor?
Condor is a high-throughput computing system. Similar to a high-performance computing system, which is the most typical kind of supercomputer, a “high-throughput computing system” is designed to process very large amounts of data with distributed computational resources. Since such programs are typically limited with respect to reading and writing the data, high performance is needed in the realm of data access and manipulation rather than in processing speed. In order to accomplish this, the system provides an efficient way to store and access data while providing computational resources that allow the data to be processed by many machines at once if the data permits.1)
How is Condor Used at W&L?
Condor's Status
Use CondorView to check the status of the Condor cluster at any given moment. You can even see which users are submitting the most jobs to Condor.
Mapping the Universe
When Condor isn't busy running user jobs, it intelligently runs what are called “Backfill” jobs. This means that when the computers in the Condor cluster aren't busy and Condor doesn't have any jobs to run, Condor participates in volunteer computing projects. Right now, Condor is participating in the MilkyWay@home Project, which is a project created and supported by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to model the 3D structures in our galaxy.
Condor Documentation
We currently use Condor version 7.8.1. The Condor documentation for version 7.8.1 can be found here. You can find the official documentation for other versions of Condor on the official Condor Project site.