1 / 46

installing and building gtlab

Make a Google gadget. Mix and match tags in a pipeline to make a new ... If you want to hook tags into chains, implement getOutput() and setInput ...

Kelvin_Ajay
Télécharger la présentation

installing and building gtlab

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Installing and Building GTLAB Marlon Pierce Indiana Univeristy

  2. GTLAB and OGCE • OGCE contains multiple sub-projects • Portlet-based Grid portal (with GridSphere and Tomcat). • Workflow suite (services and add-ins to the portal) • Information Web services • Gadget container • Cyberaide JavaScript libraries • GTLAB • These are packaged with Maven and include everything you need except Java and (for some services) MySQL. • We try to make things installable with minimal fuss. • Consistent directory structures across projects • Edit one config file (pom.xml) • Run one command (mvn clean install) • You may need to futz a little with MySQL

  3. Overview and Examples

  4. User’s Browser iGoogle, Facebook Portlet, Gadget Containers GTLAB Gadgets RPS, RDS, GPIR Services TeraGrid Services (GRAM, GridFTP, INCA) Google GData Services, Twitter Feeds, etc GTLAB’s Relationship to Other Components

  5. Various GTLAB applications deployed as portlets: Remote directory browsing, proxy management, and LoadLeveler queues.

  6. GTLAB Applications as Google Gadgets: MOAB dashboard, remote directory browser, and proxy management.

  7. MyProxy Example <h:form id="form"> <h:outputText value="Username:"/> <h:inputText value="#{resource.username}" required="true"/> <h:outputText value="Password: "/> <h:inputSecret value="#{resource.password}" required="true"/> <h:outputText value="MyProxy Server: "/> <h:inputText value="#{resource.myproxyHostname}" required="true"/> <o:submit id="submit" value="Submit" binding="#{builder.body}" action="#{builder.junkAction}" > <o:multitask id="multi" persistent="true" taskname="#{resource.taskname}"> <o:myproxy id="mypr" hostname="#{resource.myproxyHostname}" lifetime="2" password="#{resource.password}" port="7512" username="#{resource.username}"/> </o:multitask> </o:submit> </h:form>

  8. Executing Multiple Task <o:submit id="submit" value="Submit" binding="#{builder.body}" action="#{builder.junkAction}" > <o:multitask id="multi" persistent="true" taskname="#{resource.taskname}"> <o:jobsubmitid="js" myfaces="true" arguments="#{resource.arguments}" executable="#{resource.executable}" hostname="#{resource.hostname}" provider="#{resource.provider}" stdout="#{resource.stdout}"/> <o:filetransferid="ft" myfaces="true" from="#{resource.from}" to="#{resource.to}" /> <o:dependency id="dep" task="ft" dependsOn="js"/> </o:multitask> </o:submit>

  9. Resource Prediction Service Client with GTLAB <o:submit id="submit" value="Submit" binding="#{builder.body}" action="#{builder.junkAction}"> <o:multitask id="multi" persistent="true" taskname="#{resources.taskname”> <o:rpsOptimal resource="task1-resources" id="rpsoptimal-exec" myfaces="true"/> </o:multitask> </o:submit>

  10. Example with Dependency <o:submit id="submit” …> <o:multitask id="multi” …> <o:rpsAddModel resource="task1-resources" id="rpsAddModel-exec" myfaces="true"/> <o:rpsManager resource="task1-resources" id="rpsManager-exec" myfaces="true"/> <o:dependency id="deps-rpsstuff” task="rpsManager-exec" dependsOn="rpsAddModel-exec"/> </o:multitask> </o:submit>

  11. More Detail: Available Tags and Features

  12. GTLAB Features • Extends Java Server Faces. • Tag components wrap major COG Abstraction Layer features • And Web Service clients, GridShib, etc. • Supports tag inter-dependencies. • Allows you to do standalone development. • Use JSF portlet bridge to convert into portlets • No new coding, just add/modify XML config files and jars. • Process is automated • Or forget about portlets • Convert into Google Gadgets • Develop as a Facebook application • Etc.

  13. Getting GTLAB • See http://www.collab-ogce.org/ogce/index.php/GTLAB • You can use your favorite SVN client to check out. • svn co https://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/ogce/GTLAB (latest) • svn co https://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/ogce/tags/GTLAB-tg09 (tagged) • “Latest” will give you easy access to any updates • “svn update” • Best option if you want to actively develop and get fixes right away.

  14. No SVN? Get the TAR • SourceForge’s SVN/CVS viewer now provides a “Download GNU Tar” option. • http://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/ogce/GTLAB/ for latest. • http://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/ogce/tags/GTLAB-tg09/ for tag

  15. Levels of Abstraction in GTLAB code • Note JSF is compatible with JSP, so you can mix and match. • And you can embed JavaScript • YUI, Scriptaculous user interface goodies. • Google and Facebook APIs.

  16. These will work as gadgets, portlets, or standalone applications

  17. Gadgets and Portlets

  18. GTLAB gadgets can also run as portlets with no code changes by using the JSF portlet bridge. iGoogle Client Aggregator Tomcat Web Server + Portlet Container Tomcat Web Server Compile and deploy into server GTLAB Portlets Code Base GTLAB Gadgets Code Base Decorate with bridge and container jars, xml config files.

  19. Making GTLAB Google Gadgets • A Gadget is a standalone application that is integrated into your personal iGoogle display. • They can run on your Web server. • You can use SSL/HTTPS • Google Gadgets have two versions • http: these use Google’s JavaScript APIs • url: these wrap external applications with Iframes. • We currently support “url” gadgets.

  20. Example Gadget Config File <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <Module> <ModulePrefs title="MyProxy Gadget Example" scrolling="true" height="500"/> <Content type="url" href="http://…/:8080/GTLAB/examples/MyProxyExample.jsf"> </Content> </Module> Save this as MyProxy.xml and place in a Web accessible place.

  21. Gadget containers aggregate content from multiple providers. Content is aggregated on the client by the user. Nearly any web application can be a simple gadget (as Iframes) Other Gadgets Providers Tomcat + GTLAB Gadgets Other Gadgets Providers RSS Feed, Cloud, etc Services Grid and Web Services (TeraGrid, OSG, etc) Social Network Services (Orkut, LinkedIn,etc)

  22. Click “Add stuff” and then “Add feed or gadget”. Type the URL of your gadget.

  23. GTLAB Applications as Google Gadgets: MOAB dashboard, remote directory browser, and proxy management.

  24. Common science gateway architecture. Aggregation is in the portlet container. Users have limited selections of components. HTML/HTTP Tomcat + Portlets and Container SOAP/HTTP Grid and Web Services (TeraGrid, OSG, etc) Grid and Web Services (TeraGrid, OSG, etc) Grid and Web Services (TeraGrid, OSG, etc)

  25. Making GTLAB Gadgets into Portlets • Do all development in jsf_standalone directory • This is where your template tags will be placed • When you are ready to convert: • Download and build the OGCE portal • cd GTLAB/transition • mvn clean process-resources • cd GTLAB/portlets • mvn clean install • You will need to make small edits to portlet.xml, group.xml, and layout.xml in GTLAB/portlet/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/ • That’s it.

  26. Various GTLAB applications deployed as portlets: Remote directory browsing, proxy management, and LoadLeveler queues.

  27. Getting Started with GTLAB

  28. GTLAB Directory Structure

  29. Build GTLAB <properties> <portal.server.ip> 156.56.104.143 </portal.server.ip> <host.base.url> http://${portal.server.ip}:8080/ </host.base.url> <project.home> ${env.HOME}/GTLAB </project.home> <tomcat.version> apache-tomcat-5.5.27 </tomcat.version> <catalina.home> ${project.home}/portal_deploy/${tomcat.version}/ </catalina.home> <dot.globus.home> ${env.HOME}/.globus/ </dot.globus.home> </properties> • Unpack or checkout code • Cd GTLAB • All commands are executed from here. • Edit properties at the top of pom.xml. • Change IP • Change project.home if you unpack someplace besides $HOME. • Run “mvn clean install”

  30. Run Examples • From GTLAB, start tomcat with ./startup.sh. • From GTLAB, stop Tomcat with ./shutdown.sh • Point browser to http://localhost:8080/GTLAB • Start with MyProxy Example

  31. Next Steps • Play with examples. • These are really bare bones. Make something interesting. • Make a Google gadget. • Mix and match tags in a pipeline to make a new application. • Use the dependency tag. • Note you can mix and match JSF and JSP if you are not familiar with JSF. • Try making a new tag. • Explained next.

  32. Making New Tags and Examples

  33. Making a New JSF Page from Tags • I recommend starting from the examples. • jsf_standalone/src/main/webapp/examples • “Build” the examples with • mvn –o clean install –f jsf_standalone/pom.xml • The “-o” option is used to build offline. Will also avoid unnecessary Maven repository updates. • The “-f” specifies only build this specific module. • I recommend not futzing with the deployed versions under portal_deploy. • A computer is a state machine. State must be reproducible.

  34. Making a New Tag • Run the following command from GTLAB: • mvn clean process-resources -Dtag.name=test -Dprojectname=Test -f templateTag/pom.xml • Add -Ddest.dir=/tmp for a dry run. • Replace “test” with the name of your tag. • Replace “Test” with the name for your Bean. • This will make 4 files • TestBean.java, TestTag.java, TestBeanFactory.java, UITest.java • Edits also 3 config files • gtlab-factory.xml, managed-beans.xml, components.xml • This will compile but to implement something useful, you will need to edit the highlighted files.

  35. Implementing a Tag • The place to start is TestBean.java (or whatever you used for –Dprojectname=…). • This includes several inherited methods that can be implemented. • Most important is submit(). Use the try/catch block. This is where the action is. • If you want to hook tags into chains, implement getOutput() and setInput(). • Also take a look at the other beans.

  36. Suggested Tags: A Wish List • What can you do in your bean? Anything server-side Java can do. • Some suggestions: • Implement a tag client to a remote Web service. Amazon has some interesting ones…. • Implement an RSS/Atom feed client to Twitter, your blog, Facebook, etc. • Combine the feeds as a mash-up. • Connect to a database with JDBC. • Implement a JMS publisher or subscriber. • Use Google Java APIs to interact with Blogger, Calendar, and YouTube. • Try interacting with Facebook.

  37. INCA Tags: An Extended Example

  38. Example: Make an INCA Dashboard • INCA is used as the testing framework for the TeraGrid. • You can get the latest INCA test results from the URL • http://inca.teragrid.org/inca/XML/kit-status-v1/portal_summary • See Sangmi’s notes at http://sangpall.blogspot.com/2009/03/being-nice-client-of-inca-service.html • You’ll get back some fine looking XML. • Let’s make a little dashboard out of this.

  39. First, Create a New, Empty Tag mvn clean process-resources \ -Dtag.name=incastatus \ -Dprojectname=IncaStatus \ -f templateTag/pom.xml

  40. Second, Implement the Bean • Main thing is to implement IncaStatusBean’s submit() method. • Code is hard to put in a PPT slide • See http://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/ogce/GTLAB/jsf_standalone/src/main/java/ogce/gsf/gridbeans/IncaStatusBean.java

  41. Third, Implement a JSF Page • Actual tag is shown below. • Full example is http://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/ogce/GTLAB/jsf_standalone/src/main/webapp/examples/IncaStatusExample.jsp?view=log • It includes some boilerplate (can be automated). <o:incastatus id=”mytest" resource="task1-resources” myfaces="true"/>

  42. Here’s the resulting page. You can make into a portlet in a couple of steps. You can also tie to other tags in a pipeline.

  43. Next Steps: Make a Pipeline Find Running Hosts (INCA or RDS) • Implement the setInput() and getOutput() methods. • Pipeline it with the Resource Description and Resource Prediction Service tags. • Integrate QBETS tags • Currently unwritten • Integrate with Job Submission Find Best Host for YourJob (RPS) Find Host with Shortest Wait Time (QBETS) Submit Job

  44. More Stuff about GTLAB • Supports linear tag dependencies. • Removed dependence on COG graph processing (still use the COG) • We can support graphs of any tag you care to write. • Only support pipelines currently, not full DAGs • Redesigned to simplify writing new tags. • Extensive use of factories. • You no longer have to change core code to add a tag • Templates for 4 Java files and 3 XML config files now can be done in one (mvn) step • Typically you will only need to edit one Java file.

More Related