For routine questions or requests send mail to help@cs.cmu.edu. For more urgent matters, contact the CS help desk at x8-4231 or visit them in person M-F, 9am-5pm, in WeH 3613. Outside of office hours, the phone rolls over to the CS operations group, which is staffed 24x7x365.
Q:Are the accounts ready yet?
A:Yes.
Q:What do I need to do before logging in?
A:On one of the Unix cluster machines (unix1.andrew, etc.), run the
following script:
/afs/cs/academic/class/15213-s00/bin/checkin
Q:How do I log into one of these machines?
A:As follows:
% telnet FISH.machine.cmcl.cs.cmu.edu Trying 128.2.222.163... Connected to FISH.machine.cmcl.cs.cmu.edu. Escape character is '^]'. [ Kerberos V4 accepts you ] [ Kerberos V4 challenge successful ] Red Hat Linux release 5.2 (Apollo) Kernel 2.0.36 on an i686 login: bovik@andrew.cmu.edu ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ don't leave this out! password: [andrew password]
Alternatively, if you use ssh:
% ssh -l bovik@andrew.cmu.edu FISH.machine.cmcl.cs.cmu.edu bovik@andrew.cmu.edu@a.FISH.machine's password: [andrew password]
Don't forget to replace "FISH" with a cluster machine name from the table below.
Intel engineers traditionally use the names of North American rivers as internal names for their processor projects. So it seems fitting that we, as denizens of the Intel cluster, name the machines after freshwater fish of North America. The machines can be accessed with either ssh or telnet.
bass.cmcl.cs.cmu.edu | bluegill.cmcl.cs.cmu.edu |