And how can I use it? Improve this question. Zypher Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Improve this answer. Chealion Chealion 5, 26 26 silver badges 29 29 bronze badges. Chealion answered the how part of your question quite well. To address which types of applications can use Xgrid: Xgrid is well suited to any task that can be distributed to run in parallel on multiple computers, whether workstations or servers.
Chopper3 Chopper3 99k 9 9 gold badges silver badges bronze badges. Cool, can i use xgrid for Adobe Photoshop CS4 e.
NeoNman nopers, sorry, that would be like some kind of Holy Grail, with extra cheese and a free priority pass for space mountain, sorry. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. An Xgrid setup requires three different categories, or roles, of Macs. The controller is the Mac that manages the jobs, sending portions of the processing tasks to the other participating computers and compiling the results.
The client is the computer that submits a task to the controller; the client need not actively participate in the processing or even be turned on while the task is being performed.
Xgrid is the last of the services we'll be looking at tonight, and it's not a new one so we won't spend too much time here. Accessible only via Server Admin, Xgrid is Apple's distributed computing service - basically, it allows many computers to process a single task, thus completing that task exponentially more quickly than any one computer could do alone.
Configuring the service is easy - just select the service in Server Admin, click the Configure Xgrid Service button, elect to create an Xgrid Host, input your Directory Administrator credentials, and you're done. You can control how clients authenticate to your Xgrid in the Controller tab within the Settings tab. For convenience's sake, I'll just have my clients authenticate with a simple password. Well, now you can by creating a computer to computer WiFi network just for you.
Both these scenarios are covered in this section with step by step instructions. It's really simple to create and publish web sites on your internal network, just with a few clicks. This section shows you how to setup web sharing and more importantly, where to install the files and folder required once the web service is running.
Using both iWeb and Rapidweaver as examples, the show demonstrates exactly how to export your websites locally. If you want to be a bit more adventurous, this week's show also shows you how to install and run MAMP - a completely self contained web server running in isolation on your Mac. Great for testing or experimenting without the expense or complication of a separate server.
Xgrid Sharing Distributed computing for the rest of us! Xgrid is built into every copy of OSX and allows application developers to create truly distributed processing environments for heavy number crunching. This section explains Xgrid and shows one example of an Internet wide Xgrid that you can connect to.
0コメント