1 / 40

Managing Configuration of Computing Clusters with Kickstart and XML using NPACI Rocks

Managing Configuration of Computing Clusters with Kickstart and XML using NPACI Rocks. Philip M. Papadopoulos Program Director, Grid and Cluster Computing San Diego Supercomputer Center University of California, San Diego. The Rocks Guys. Philip Papadopoulos

clover
Télécharger la présentation

Managing Configuration of Computing Clusters with Kickstart and XML using NPACI Rocks

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. Managing Configuration of Computing Clusters withKickstart and XMLusing NPACI Rocks Philip M. Papadopoulos Program Director, Grid and Cluster Computing San Diego Supercomputer Center University of California, San Diego

  2. The Rocks Guys • Philip Papadopoulos • Parallel message passing expert (PVM and Fast Messages) • Mason Katz • Network protocol expert (x-kernel, Scout and Fast Messages) • Greg Bruno • 10 years experience with NCR’s Teradata Systems • Builders of clusters which drive very large commercial databases • All three of us have worked together for the past 3 years building NT and Linux clusters

  3. Computing Clusters • Background • Overview of the Rocks Methodology and Toolkit • Description based configuration • Taking the administrator out of cluster administration • XML-based assembly instructions • What’s next

  4. Scoping Rules • Focused on computing clusters • Large number of nodes that need similar system software footprints • MPI-style parallelism is the dominant application model • Not assuming homogeneity of hardware configurations • Do assume the same OS • Even “homogeneous” systems exhibit hardware differences • Not high-availability clusters • Our techniques can help here, but we don’t address the specific software needs of HA

  5. Node Node Node Node Node Node Node Node Node Node Many variations on a basic layout Front-end Node(s) Power Distribution (Net addressable units as option) Public Ethernet Fast-Ethernet Switching Complex Gigabit Network Switching Complex

  6. Current Configuration of the Meteor • Rocks v2.2 (RedHat 7.2) • 2 Frontends, 4 NFS Servers • 100 nodes • Compaq • 800, 933, IA-64 • SCSI, IDA • IBM • 733, 1000 • SCSI • 50 GB RAM • Ethernet • For management • Myrinet 2000

  7. NPACI Rocks Toolkit – rocks.npaci.edu • Techniques and software for easy installation, management, monitoring and update of Linux clusters • Installation • Bootable CD + floppy which contains all the packages and site configuration info to bring up an entire cluster • Management and update philosophies • Trivial to completely reinstall any (all) nodes. • Nodes are 100% automatically configured • Use of DHCP, NIS for configuration • Use RedHat’s Kickstart to define the set of software that defines a node. • All software is delivered in a RedHat Package (RPM) • Encapsulate configuration for a package (e.g.. Myrinet) • Manage dependencies • Never try to figure out if node software is consistent • If you ever ask yourself this question, reinstall the node

  8. Goals • Simplify cluster management (Make clusters easy) • Remove the system administrator • Make software available to a wide audience • Build on de facto standards • Allow contributors to solve specific problems and package software components • Track the rapid pace of Linux development • Redhat 6.2 – one update every 3 days • Redhat 7.x – two updates every 3 days • Leverage and remain open source • Unlikely that computational cluster managment is a long-term commercial business • Some components should be purchased! (compilers, debuggers …)

  9. Who is Using It? • Growing list of users that we know about: • SDSC, SIO, UCSD (8 Clusters, including CMS (GriPhyN) prototype) • Caltech • Burnham Cancer Institute • PNNL (several clusters, small, medium, large) • University of Texas • University of North Texas • Northwestern University • University of Hong Kong • Compaq (Working relationship with their Intel Standard Servers Group) • Singapore Bioinformatics Institute • Myricom (Their internal development cluster)

  10. What we thought we “Learned” • Clusters are phenomenal price/performance computational engines, but are hard to manage • Cluster management is a full-time job which gets linearly harder as one scales out. • “Heterogeneous” Nodes are a bummer (network, memory, disk, MHz, current kernel version, PXE, CDs).

  11. You Must Unlearn What You Have Learned

  12. Installation/Management • Need to have a strategy for managing cluster nodes • Pitfalls • Installing each node “by hand” • Difficult to keep software on nodes up to date • Disk Imaging techniques (e.g.. VA Disk Imager) • Difficult to handle heterogeneous nodes • Treats OS as a single monolithic system • Specialized installation programs (e.g. IBM’s LUI, or RWCPs Multicast installer) – • let OS packaging vendors do their job • Penultimate • RedHat Kickstart • Define packages needed for OS on nodes, kickstart gives a reasonable measure of control. • Need to fully automate to scale out (Rocks gets you there)

  13. Networks • High-performance networks • Myrinet, Giganet, Servernet, Gigabit Ethernet, etc. • Ethernet only  Beowulf-class • Management Networks (Light Side) • Ethernet – 100 Mbit • Management network used to manage compute nodes and launch jobs • Nodes are in Private IP (192.168.x.x) space, front-end does NAT • Ethernet – 802.11b • Easy access to the cluster via laptops • Plus, wireless will change your life • Evil Management Networks (Dark Side) • A serial “console” network is not necessary • A KVM (keyboard/video/monitor) switching system adds too much complexity, cables, and cost

  14. How to Build Your Rocks Cluster • Get and burn ISO CD image from Rocks.npaci.edu • Fill-out form to build initial kickstart file for your first front-end machine • Kickstart “naked” frontend with CD and kickstart file • Reboot frontend machine • Integrate compute nodes with “Insert Ethers” • Ready to go!

  15. insert-ethers • Used to populate the “nodes” MySQL table • Parses a file (e.g., /var/log/messages) for DHCPDISCOVER messages • Extracts MAC addr and, if not in table, adds MAC addr and hostname to table • For every new entry: • Rebuilds /etc/hosts and /etc/dhcpd.conf • Reconfigures NIS • Restarts DHCP and PBS • Hostname is • <basename>-<cabinet>-<chassis> • Configurable to change hostname • E.g., when adding new cabinets

  16. Configuration Derived from Database Automated node discovery mySQL DB Node 0 insert-ethers Node 1 makehosts makedhcp pbs-config-sql Node N /etc/hosts /etc/dhcpd.conf pbs node list

  17. Remote re-installationShoot-node and eKV • Rocks provides a simple method to remotely reinstall a node • CD/Floppy used to install the first time • By default, hard power cycling will cause a node to reinstall itself. • Addressable PDUs can do this on generic hardware • With no serial (or KVM) console, we are able to watch a node as installs (eKV), but … • Can’t see BIOS messages at boot up • Syslog for all nodes sent to a log host (and to local disk) • Can look at what a node was complaining about before it went offline

  18. Remote re-installationShoot-node and eKV 192.168.254.254 Remotely starting reinstallation on two nodes 192.168.254.253

  19. Key Ideas • No difference between OS and application software • OS installation is disposable • Unique state that is kept only at a node is bad • Identical mechanisms used to install both • Single step installation of updated software OS • Security patches pre-applied to the distribution not post-applied on the node • Inheritance of software configurations • Distribution • Configuration • Description-based configuration rather than image-based

  20. Don’t Differentiate OS and Application SW • All software delivered in RPM packages • Use a package manager to handles conflicts • RPM is not totally complete, but • Packages will not overwrite each other without explicit override • Tracking what has changed between the software as packaged and what is on disk • rpm –verify • We install a complete system from a selected list of packages and associated configuration • latest security patches applied before installation.

  21. System State ? • What is the installed state of a system? • Software bits on disk • Configuration information (files, registry, database) OR • Software bits in memory • Configuration in memory • How you answer this question is fundamental to how one moves (updates) a system from one state to the next. • If the first, then you can update an installation and configuration in a single (re)install/reboot step • If the second, you may have to make several state changes (ordering dependencies) to update state.

  22. Rocks Hierarchy Collection of all possible software packages (AKA Distribution) Descriptive information to configure a node Kickstart file RPMs Appliances Compute Node IO Server Web Server

  23. Description-based Configuration Collection of all possible software packages (AKA Distribution) Descriptive information to configure a node Kickstart file RPMs Compute Node IO Server Web Server

  24. Building Distributions: Rocks-dist • Integrate Packages from • Redhat (mirror) – base distribution + updates • Contrib directory • Locally produced packages • Local contrib (e.g. commercially bought code) • Packages from rocks.npaci.edu • Produces a single updated distribution that resides on front-end • This is a RedHat Distribution with patches and updates pre-applied

  25. NPACI / SDSC • # rocks-dist mirror • Red Hat mirror • Red Hat 7.2 release • Red Hat 7.2 updates • # rocks-dist dist • Rocks 2.2 release • Red Hat 7.2 release • Red Hat 7.2 updates • Rocks software • Contributed software

  26. Your Site • # rocks-dist mirror • Rocks mirror • Rocks 2.2 release • Rocks 2.2 updates • # rocks-dist dist • Kickstart distribution • Rocks 2.2 release • Rocks 2.2 updates • Local software • Contributed software • This is the same procedure NPACI Rocks uses. • Organizations can customize Rocks for their site. • Dept’s can customize

  27. Rocks-dist Summary • Created for us to build software release • Modifies a stock Red Hat release • Applies all updates • Adds local and contributed software • Patches boot images • eKV  allows us to monitor at a remote installation without a KVM • URL kickstart  description and rpms transferred over http • Inheritance hierarchy allows customization of software collection at many levels • End-user • Group • Department • Company • Community  important for distributed science group

  28. Description-based Configuration Collection of all possible software packages (AKA Distribution) Descriptive information to configure a node Kickstart file RPMs Compute Node IO Server Web Server

  29. Description-based Configuration • Built an infrastructure that "describes“ the roles of cluster nodes • Nodes are installed using Red Hat's kickstart • ASCII file with names of packages to install and "post processing“ commands • Rocks builds kickstart on-the-fly, tailored for each node • NPACI Rocks kickstart is general configuration + local node configuration • General configuration is described by modules linked in a configuration graph • Local node configuration (applied during post processing) is stored in a MySQL database VS.

  30. What are the Challenges • Kickstart file is ASCII • There is some structure • Pre-configuration • Package list • Post-configuration • Not a “programmable” format • Most complicated section is post-configuration • Usually this is handcrafted • Want to be able to build sections of the kickstart file from pieces

  31. Break down configuration of appliances into small compositional pieces

  32. Cluster Description Appliances

  33. Allows small differences in configuration to be easily described

  34. Architecture Dependencies • Allows users to focus only on the differences • Architecture type is passed from the top

  35. Abstract Package Names, versions, architecture ssh-client Not ssh-client-2.1.5.i386.rpm Allow an administrator to encapsulate a logical subsystem Node-specific configuration can be retrieved from a database IP Address Firewall policies Remote access policies … <?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <!DOCTYPE kickstart SYSTEM "@KICKSTART_DTD@" [<!ENTITY ssh "openssh">]> <kickstart> <description> Enable SSH </description> <package>&ssh; </package> <package> &ssh;-clients</package> <package> &ssh;-server</package> <package> &ssh;-askpass</package> <!-- include XFree86 packages for xauth --> <package>XFree86</package> <package>XFree86-libs</package> <post> cat &gt; /etc/ssh/ssh_config &lt;&lt; 'EOF' <!-- default client setup --> Host * CheckHostIP no ForwardX11 yes ForwardAgent yes StrictHostKeyChecking no UsePrivilegedPort no FallBackToRsh no Protocol 1,2 EOF </post> </kickstart> XML Used to Describe Modules

  36. Creating the Kickstart file • Node makes HTTP request to get configuration • Can be online or captured to a file • Node reports architecture type, IP address, [ appliance type], [options] • Kpp – preprocessor • Start at appliance type (node) and make a single large XML file by traversing the graph • Kgen – generation • Translation to kickstart format. Other formats could be supported • Node-specific configuration looked up in a database • Graph visualization using dot (AT&T)

  37. HTTP as Transport • Kickstart file is retrieved VIA HTTP • Rocks Web site provides a form to build configuration to build a remote site’s frontend (bootstrap, captured to a file) • Cluster frontend as server for cluster nodes (online, bootstrap nodes) • RPMs transported via HTTP • Web infrastructure is very scalable and robust • Managing configurations can go beyond a cluster • We’ve installed/configured our home machines from SDSC over a cable modem

  38. Payoff – Never before seen hardware • Dual Athlon, White box, 20 GB IDE, 3Com Ethernet • 3:00 PM: In cardboard box • Shook out the loose screws • Dropped in a Myrinet card • Inserted it into cabinet 0 • Cabled it up • 3:25 PM: Inserted the NPACI Rocks CD • Ran insert-ethers (assigned node name compute-0-24) • 3:40 PM: Ran Linpack

  39. Futures • Improve Monitoring, debugging, self-diagnosis of cluster-specific software • Improve documentation! • Continue Tracking RedHat updates/releases • Prepare for Infiniband Interconnect • Global file systems, I/O is an Achilles heel of clusters • Grid Tools (Development and Testing) • Globus • Grid research tools (APST) • GridPort toolkit • Integration with other SDSC projects • SRB • MiX - data mediation • Visualization Cluster - Display Wall

  40. Summary • Rocks significantly lowers the bar for users to deploy usable compute clusters • Very simple hardware assumptions • XML module descriptions allows encapsulation • Graph interconnection allows appliances to share configuration • Deltas among appliances easily visualize • HTTP transport scalable in • Performance • Distance

More Related