HP XC System Software Installation Guide Version 2.1
A comprehensive site containing general inform ation, such as the specification and FA Qs,
and p ointers to a variety of other resources, including tutorials, implementations, a nd
other MPI-related sites.
Related Compiler Web Sites
• http://www.intel.com/software/products/compilers/index.htm
Web site for Intel® compilers.
• http://support.intel.com/support/performancetools/
Web site for ge neral Intel software development information.
• http://www.pgroup.com/
Home page for The Portland Group™, sup plier of the PGI® com piler.
Additional Publications
For more information about standard Linux system administration or other related software
topics, r efer to the following docu ments, w hich m ust be purchased separately:
• Linux Administration Unleashed, by Thomas Schenk, et al.
• Managing NFS and NIS , by Hal Stern, Mike Eisler, and Ricardo Labiaga (O’Reilly)
• MySQL, by Paul Debois
• MySQL Cookbook, by Paul Debois
• High Performance M ySQL, by Jeremy Zawodny and Derek J. Balling (O’Reilly)
• Perl Cookbook, Second Edition , by Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington
• Perl in A Nutshell: A Desktop Quick R eference , by E llen Siever, et al.
Typographical Conventions
Italic font
Italic (slanted) font indicates the n ame of a variable that you can
replace in a command example or in form atio n in a display that
represents several possible values.
Document titles are shown in Italic font. For example: Linux
Administration Handbook.
Courier font
Courier font represents text that is displayed by the computer.
Courier font also represents literal items, such as com m and
names, file names, routines, directory names, path names, signals,
messages, and programming language structures.
Bold text
In com m and and interactive examples, bold text represents the
literal text that you enter. For exam ple:
# cd /opt/hptc/config/sbin
In text paragraphs, bold text in dicates a new term or a term that is
defined in the glossary.
$ an d # In command exam ples, a dollar sign ($) represents the system
prompt for the bash shell and also show s that a user is in non-root
mode. A po und sign (#) indicates that the user is in roo t or superuser
mode.
xii About This Document