1 / 22

GPFS & StoRM

GPFS & StoRM. Jon Wakelin University of Bristol. Pre-Amble. GPFS Basics What it is & what it does GPFS Concepts More in-depth technical concepts GPFS Topologies HPC Facilities at Bristol How we are using GPFS Creating a “mock-up”/staging-service for GridPP StoRM Recap & References.

coen
Télécharger la présentation

GPFS & StoRM

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. GPFS & StoRM Jon Wakelin University of Bristol

  2. Pre-Amble • GPFS Basics • What it is & what it does • GPFS Concepts • More in-depth technical concepts • GPFS Topologies • HPC Facilities at Bristol • How we are using GPFS • Creating a “mock-up”/staging-service for GridPP • StoRM • Recap & References

  3. GPFS Basics • IBM’s General Parallel File System • “Scaleable high-performance parallel file system” • Numerous HA features • Life-cycle Management Tools • Provides POSIX and “extended” interfaces to data • Available for AIX and Linux • Only supported on AIX, RHEL and SuSE • Installed successfully on SL3.x (ask me if you are interested) • GPFS can run on a mix of these OSs • Pricing - per processor • Free version available through IBM’s Scholars program • Currently developing new Licensing model

  4. GPFS Basics • Provides High-performance I/O • Divides files into blocks and stripes the blocks across disks (on multiple storage devices) • Reads/Writes the blocks in parallel • Tuneable block sizes (depends on your data) • Block-level locking mechanism • Multiple applications can access the same file concurrently • “multiple editors can work on different parts of a single file simultaneously. This eliminates the additional storage, merging and management overhead typically required to maintain multiple copies” • Client-side data-caching • Where is data cached? • Multi-Cluster Configuration • Join GPFS clusters together • Encrypted data and authentication or just authentication • openssl and keys • Different security contexts (root squash á la NFS)

  5. GPFS Basics • Information Life-cycle Management • Tiered storage • Create groups of disks within a file system, • based on reliability, performance, location, etc • Policy driven automation • Automatically move, delete or replicate files - based on filename, username, or fileset. • e.g. Keep newest files on fastest hardware, migrate them to older hardware over time • e.g. Direct files to appropriate resource upon creation. • Other notable points • Can specify user, group and fileset quotas • POSIX and NFS v4 ACL support • Can specify different IPs for GPFS and non-GPFS traffic • Maximum limit of 268 million disks (2048 is default max)

  6. GPFS Topologies • SAN-Attached • All nodes are physically attached to all NSDs • High performance but expensive!

  7. GPFS Topologies • Network Shared Disk (NSD) Server • Subset of nodes are physically attached to NSDs • Other nodes forward their IO requests to the NSD servers which perform the IO and pass back the data

  8. application Linux GPFS NSD Server GPFS Topologies • In practice, often have a mixed NSD + SAN environment • Nodes use SAN if they can and NSD servers if they can’t • If SAN connectivity fails a SAN-attached node can fallback to using remaining NSD servers Local Area Network application application application Linux Linux Linux GPFS GPFS GPFS NSD NSD NSD Server

  9. GPFS Redundancy & HA • Non-GPFS • Redundant power supplies • Redundant hot swap fans • … • RAID with hot swappable disks (multiple IBM DS4700s) • FC with redundant paths (GPFS know how to use this) • HA Features in GPFS • Primary and secondary Configuration Servers • Primary and secondary NSD Servers for each Disk • Replicate Metadata • Replicate data • Failure Groups • Specify which machines have a single point of failure • GPFS will use this info to make sure that replicated data is not striped across failure groups

  10. GPFS Quorum • Quorum • A “Majority” of the nodes must be present before access to shared disks is allowed • Prevent subgroups making conflicting decisions • In event of failure disks in minority suspend and those in the majority continue • Quorum Nodes • These nodes are counted to determine if the system is quorate • If the system is no longer quorate • GPFS unmounts the filesystem … • … waits until quorum is established … • … and then recovers the FS. • Quorum Nodes with Tie-Breaker Disks

  11. GPFS Performance • Preliminary results using time dd if=/dev/zero of=testfile bs=1k count=2000000 • Multiple write processes on same node 1 process 90MB/s 2 processes 51 MB/s 4 processes 18MB/s • Multiple write processes from different nodes 1 process 90MB/s 2 processes 58 MB/s 4 processes 28 MB/s 5 processes 23 MB/s

  12. GPFS Performance • In a hybrid environment (SAN-attached and NSD Server nodes) • Read/Writes from SAN-attached nodes place little load on the NSD servers • Read/Writes from other nodes place a high load on the NSD servers • SAN-attached [root@bf39 gpfs]# time dd if=/dev/zero of=file_zero count=2048 bs=1024k real 0m31.773s [root@bf40 GPFS]# top -p 26651 26651 root 0 -20 1155m 73m 7064 S 0 1.5 0:10.78 mmfsd • Via NSD Server [root@bfa-se /]# time dd if=/dev/zero of=/gpfs/file_zero count=2048 bs=1024k real 0m31.381s [root@bf40 GPFS]# top -p 26651 26651 root 0 -20 1155m 73m 7064 S 34 1.5 0:10.78 mmfsd

  13. Bristol HPC Facilities • Bristol, IBM, ClearSpeed and ClusterVision • BabyBlue - installed Apr 2007 • Currently undergoing acceptance trials • BlueCrystal ~Dec 2007 • Testing • A number of “pump-priming” projects have been identified • Majority of users will develop, or port code, directly on the HPC system • Only make changes at the Application level • GridPP • System level changes • Pool accounts, World-addressable Slaves, NAT, Run services and daemons • Instead we will build testing/staging system for GridPP • In-house and loan equipment from IBM • Reasonable Analogue of HPC facilities – • No InfiniBand (but you wouldn’t use it anyway)

  14. Bristol HPC Facilities • BabyBlue • Torque/Maui, SL 4 “Worker Node”, RHEL4 (maybe AIX) on Head-Nodes • IBM 3455, • 96 dual-core, dual-socket 2.6GHz, AMD Opterons • 4? ClearSpeed Accelerator board • 8GB RAM per node (2GB per core) • IBM DS4700 + EXP810, 15TB Transient storage • SAN/FC network running GPFS • BlueCrystal – c. Dec 2007 • Torque/Moab • 512 dual-core, dual-socket nodes (or quad-core depending on timing) • 8GB RAM per node (1GB or 2GB per core) • 50TB Storage, SAN/FC Network running GPFS • Server Room • 48 water cooled APC racks – 18 will be occupied by HPC, Physics Servers may be co-located • 3 x270kW chillers (space for 3 more)

  15. GPFS BabyBlue

  16. p-Config s-Config p-NSD s-NSD quorum quorum --- --- quorum GPFS MiniBlue IBM DS4500 – Configure hot spares

  17. StoRM • StoRM is a storage resource manager for disk based storage systems. • Implements the SRM interface version 2.2 • StoRM is designed to support guaranteed space reservation and direct access (using native POSIX I/O call) • StoRM takes advantage of high performance parallel file systems • GPFS, XFS and Lustre??? • Also standard POSIX file systems are supported • Direct access to files from “Worker Nodes” • Compare with Castor, D-Cache and DPM

  18. StoRM architecture • Front end (FE): • Exposes the web service interface • Manages user authentication • Sends the request to the BE • Data Base(DB): • Stores SRM request and status • Stores file and space information • Back end (BE):  • Binds with the underlying file systems • Enforces authorization policy on files • Manages SRM file and space metadata

  19. StoRM miscellaneous • Scalability and high availability. • FE, DB, and BE can be deployed on different machines • StoRM is designed to be configured with n FE and m BE, using a common DB • Installation (Relatively straight forward) • RPM & Yaim (FE, BE and DB all on one server) • Additional manual configuration steps • e.g. namespace.xml, Information Providers • Not completely documented yet • Mailing list • CNAF x2 and Bristol • Basic tests - http://lxdev25.cern.ch/s2test/basic/history/ • Use Case tests - http://lxdev25.cern.ch/s2test/usecase/history/ • Currently still differences between Bristol and CNAF installations

  20. StoRM usage model

  21. Summary • GPFS • Scalable high-performance file system • Highly Available, built on redundant components • Tiered storage or multi-cluster configuration for GridPP work • HPC • University wide facility – not just for PP • GridPP requirements rather different from general/traditional HPC users • Build an “analogue” of the HPC system for GridPP • StoRM • Better performance because StoRM builds on • Also, more appropriate data transfer model – POSIX and “file” protocol

  22. References • GPFS • http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/clusters/software/gpfs.pdf • http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/clresctr/vxrx/topic/com.ibm.cluster.gpfs.doc/gpfs_faqs/gpfsclustersfaq.pdf • http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/clusters/software/whitepapers/gpfs_intro.pdf • Storm • http://hst.home.cern.ch/hst/publications/storm_chep06.pdf • http://agenda.cnaf.infn.it/getFile.py/access?contribId=10&resId=1&materialId=slides&confId=0

More Related