\section faq_simgrid I'm new to SimGrid. I have some questions. Where should I start?
You are at the right place... Having a look to these
-<a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/articles/simgrid-tutorial.pdf">the tutorial slides</a>
-(or to these <a href="http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~alegrand/articles/slides_g5k_simul.pdf">old slides</a>,
-or to these
+<a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/blog/2010/06/28/Tutorial_at_HPCS/">the slides of the HPCS'10 tutorial</a>
+(or to these <a href="http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~alegrand/articles/slides_g5k_simul.pdf">ancient
+slides</a>, or to these
<a href="http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~alegrand/articles/Simgrid-Introduction.pdf">"obsolete" slides</a>)
may give you some insights on what SimGrid can help you to do and what
are its limitations. Then you definitely should read the \ref
users.
These archives can be found on
-<a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/simgrid.html">this web page</a>. Once you
+<a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/Research/SimGrid/">this web page</a>. Once you
got the lastest archive, you can compile it just like any archive (see above).
\subsection faq_compiling_svn Compiling SimGrid from the SVN
year = {2006},
address = {Dallas, TX},
month = Nov,
- pdf = {http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/articles/gras-iasted06.pdf},
+ pdf = {http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/Research/Publications/2006-PDCS.pdf},
note = {Best paper},
category = {core}
}
(2) is mainly given by the network bandwidth. This is the time for all bytes of
the messages to travel from one machine to the other. Please note that the
models used by SimGrid are a bit more complicated to keep realistic, as
-explained in <a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/articles/simgrid-tutorial.pdf">the
-tutorial slides</a>, but this not that important here. The time (3) is mainly
+explained in <a href="http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/blog/2010/06/28/Tutorial_at_HPCS/">the
+slides of the HPCS'10</a>, but this not that important here. The time (3) is mainly
found in the SG version and not in RL (and that's a bug). This is the time to
make sure that message were received on machine B. In real life, some buffering
at system and network level may give the illusion to machine A that the message
new user interfaces were added to broaden the targeted research
community. After surveying existing tools and methodologies we
describe the key features and benefits of SimGrid.\n
- http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/articles/SimGrid-uksim08.pdf
+ http://www.loria.fr/~quinson/Research/Publications/2008-uksim.pdf
\verbatim
@InProceedings{simgrid,