Introduction to Gadi - part 1

Gadi is Australia’s most powerful supercomputer, a highly parallel cluster comprising more than 150,000 processor cores on ten different types of compute nodes. Gadi accommodates a wide range of tasks, from running climate models to genome sequencing, from designing molecules to astrophysical modelling.
Introduction to Gadi - Part 1 is designed for new users, or users that want a refresher on the basics of Gadi.
To register for this training, click here: https://bit.ly/IntroGadi1
If you have any questions regarding this training, please contact training.nci@anu.edu.au.

Licence: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0

Contact: training.nci@anu.edu.au

Keywords: HPC, supercomputer


Additional information

Target audience: Undergraduate, Masters student, PhD student, MBR student, Post-doc / Fellow, Academic, Professional (research-related)

Resource type: Tutorial

Status: Active

Prerequisites:

The only prerequisite for this course is that you have an active NCI user account ready for login. If you do not have an NCI user account you may register for this course, however you will not be able to take full advantage of any hands-on exercises.
Attendees are strongly encouraged to review the following pages, which contain essential background information, before the course.
Welcome to Gadi
Linux Command Quick Reference

Learning objectives:

The training is aiming to empower attendees to work with confidence on Gadi with the basic understanding of
resource accounting
the difference among login, compute and data-mover nodes
job submission and management
module environment, for using software applications

Date created: 2021-03-01

Authors: Roger Edberg

Contributors: National Computational Infrastructure

Introduction to Gadi - part 1 https://staging.dresa.org.au/materials/introduction-to-gadi-part-i Gadi is Australia’s most powerful supercomputer, a highly parallel cluster comprising more than 150,000 processor cores on ten different types of compute nodes. Gadi accommodates a wide range of tasks, from running climate models to genome sequencing, from designing molecules to astrophysical modelling. Introduction to Gadi - Part 1 is designed for new users, or users that want a refresher on the basics of Gadi. To register for this training, click here: https://bit.ly/IntroGadi1 If you have any questions regarding this training, please contact training.nci@anu.edu.au. training.nci@anu.edu.au National Computational Infrastructure HPC, supercomputer ugrad masters phd mbr ecr researcher support