Accès à CVMFS

Revision as of 15:48, 14 August 2019 by Diane27 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== S'abonner au service d'annonces == Occasionally, changes will be made regarding CVMFS or the software or other content provided by Compute Canada CVMFS repositories, which...")
Other languages:

Introduction

Les répertoires de logiciels et de données offerts par Calcul Canada sont accessibles via CVMFS (CERN Virtual Machine File System). Puisque CVMFS est préconfiguré pour vous, vous pouvez utiliser ses répertoires directement. Pour plus d’information sur l’environnement logiciel de Calcul Canada, consultez les pages wiki Logiciels disponibles, Utiliser des modules, Python, R et Installation de logiciels dans votre répertoire /home.

Nous décrivons ici comment installer et configurer CVMFS sur votre propre ordinateur ou grappe; vous aurez ainsi accès aux mêmes répertoires et environnements logiciels que ceux des systèmes de Calcul Canada.

Nous utilisons comme exemple l'environnement logiciel présenté à la conférence PEARC 2019, Practices and Experience in Advanced Research Computing.

Avant de commencer

Important

Veuillez vous abonner au service d'annonces et remplir ce formulaire d'enregistrement. Si vous utilisez notre environnement logiciel dans votre recherche, veuillez reconnaître la contribution de Calcul Canada selon ces directives.

Nous vous remercions de mentionner aussi notre présentation.


S'abonner au service d'annonces

Occasionally, changes will be made regarding CVMFS or the software or other content provided by Compute Canada CVMFS repositories, which may affect users or require administrators to take action in order to ensure uninterrupted access to the Compute Canada CVMFS repositories. Subscribe to the cvmfs-announce@computecanada.ca mailing list in order to receive important but infrequent notifications about these changes, either using a Google account here, or by emailing cvmfs-announce+subscribe@computecanada.ca and then replying to the confirmation email you subsequently receive.

Terms of use and support

The CVMFS client software is provided by CERN. The Compute Canada CVMFS repositories are provided by Compute Canada without any warranty. Compute Canada reserves the right to limit or block your access to the CVMFS repositories and software environment if you violate applicable terms of use (such as, by way of example and without limitation, sections 3.5 or 3.11), or at our discretion.

CVMFS requirements

For a single system

To install CVMFS on an individual system, such as your laptop or desktop, you will need:

  • A supported operating system (see installation).
  • Support for FUSE.
  • Approximately 50 GB of available local storage. Note that this is for cache. It can be smaller, and will only get filled based on the files being accessed.
  • Outbound HTTP access to the internet.
    • Or at least outbound HTTP access to one or more local proxy servers.

If your system lacks FUSE support or local storage, or has limited network connectivity or other restrictions, you may be able to use some alternative approaches.

For multiple systems

If multiple CVMFS clients are deployed, for example in a cluster, laboratory, campus or other site, each system must meet the above requirements, and the following considerations apply as well:

  • We require that you deploy forward caching HTTP proxy servers (such as Squid) for your site.
    • Note that if you have only one such proxy server it will be a single point of failure for your site. Generally you should have at least two local proxies at your site, and potentially additional nearby or regional proxies as backups.
  • It is recommended to synchronize the identity of the cvmfs service account across all client nodes (e.g. using LDAP or other means).
    • This facilitates use of an alien cache and should be done before CVMFS is installed. Even if you do not anticipate using an alien cache at this time, it is easier to synchronize the accounts initially than to try to potentially change them later.

Software environment requirements

Minimal requirements

  • Supported operating systems:
    • Linux: with a Kernel 2.6.32 or newer.
    • Windows: with Windows Subsystem for Linux version 2, with a distribution of Linux that matches the requirement above.
    • Mac OS: only through a virtual machine.
  • CPU: x86 CPU supporting at least one of SSE3, AVX, AVX2 or AVX512 instruction sets.

Optimal requirements

  • Scheduler: Slurm or Torque, for tight integration with OpenMPI applications.
  • Network interconnect: Ethernet, InfiniBand or OmniPath, for parallel applications.
  • GPU: NVidia GPU with CUDA drivers (7.5 or newer) installed, for CUDA-enabled applications. (See below for caveats about CUDA.)
  • As few Linux packages installed as possible (fewer packages reduce the odds of conflicts).

Installing CVMFS

If you wish to use Ansible, a CVMFS client role is provided as-is, for basic minimal configuration of a CVMFS client on an RPM-based system. Otherwise, use the following instructions.

Pre-installation

It is recommended that the local CVMFS cache (located at /var/lib/cvmfs by default, configurable via the CVMFS_CACHE_BASE setting) be on a dedicated filesystem so that the storage usage of CVMFS is not shared with that of other applications. Accordingly, you should provision that filesystem before installing CVMFS. The cache should typically be about 50 GB in size, but more or less may be suitable in different situations. For more details see the client configuration documentation.

Installation

Follow the instructions relative to your operating system in order to install CVMFS. These instructions have been tested on the following distributions:

  • CentOS 6, CentOS 7
  • Fedora 29
  • Debian 9
  • Ubuntu 18.04

When installing packages you may be prompted to accept some GPG keys. You should ensure that their fingerprints match these expected values:

  • CernVM key: 70B9 8904 8820 8E31 5ED4 5208 230D 389D 8AE4 5CE7
  • Compute Canada CVMFS key one: C0C4 0F04 70A3 6AF2 7CC4 4D5A 3B9F C55A CF21 4CFC
  • Compute Canada CVMFS key two: DDCD 3C84 ACDF 133F 4BEC FBFA 49DE 2015 FF55 B476
  • Install the CERN YUM repository and GPG key:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo yum install https://ecsft.cern.ch/dist/cvmfs/cvmfs-release/cvmfs-release-latest.noarch.rpm
  • Install the Compute Canada YUM repository and GPG keys:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo yum install https://package.computecanada.ca/yum/cc-cvmfs-public/Packages/computecanada-release-latest.noarch.rpm
  • Install the CVMFS client and configuration packages from those YUM repositories:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo yum install cvmfs cvmfs-config-default cvmfs-config-computecanada cvmfs-auto-setup
  • Install the default configuration package:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo dnf install https://ecsft.cern.ch/dist/cvmfs/cvmfs-config/cvmfs-config-default-latest.noarch.rpm
  • Download the CVMFS client RPM for your operating system from https://cernvm.cern.ch/portal/filesystem/downloads and install it with dnf (or yum).
    • Since a yum repository for CVMFS is not available for this operating system, you will need to periodically check for updates to the CVMFS client and default configuration and install them manually.
  • Apply the initial client setup:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo cvmfs_config setup
  • Install the Compute Canada YUM repository and GPG keys:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo dnf install https://package.computecanada.ca/yum/cc-cvmfs-public/Packages/computecanada-release-latest.noarch.rpm
  • Install the Compute Canada CVMFS configuration from that YUM repository:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo dnf install cvmfs-config-computecanada
  • Follow the instructions here to add the CERN apt repository.
  • Install the CVMFS client from that repository:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo apt-get install cvmfs cvmfs-config-default uuid-runtime
  • Apply the initial client setup:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo cvmfs_config setup
  • Download and install the Compute Canada CVMFS configuration package:
[name@server ~]$ wget https://package.computecanada.ca/yum/cc-cvmfs-public/OtherPackages/cvmfs-config-computecanada-latest.all.deb
[name@server ~]$ sudo dpkg -i cvmfs-config-computecanada-latest.all.deb
    • Since an apt repository is not available for this package, make sure you are subscribed to be informed of updates.

As these operating systems are RPM-based, following the same instructions as for Fedora should work.

  • For Windows, you first need to have Windows Subsystem for Linux, version 2. As of this writing (July 2019), this is supported only in a developer version of Windows. The instructions for installing it are here [1].
  • Once it is installed, install the Linux distribution of your choice, and follow the appropriate instructions from one of the other tabs.
  • Under WSL2, with Ubuntu, /dev/fuse is not usable by other users than root. This does not allow CVMFS to work properly. To fix this, run
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ chmod go+rw /dev/fuse

For more information refer to the quickstart guide.

Configuration

Do not create any CVMFS configuration files ending with .conf. In order to avoid collisions with upstream configuration sources, all locally-applied configuration must be in .local files. See structure of /etc/cvmfs for more information.

In particular, create the file /etc/cvmfs/default.local, with at least the following minimal configuration:

CVMFS_REPOSITORIES="cvmfs-config.computecanada.ca,soft.computecanada.ca"
CVMFS_QUOTA_LIMIT=44500
CVMFS_HTTP_PROXY="<define this parameter according to the information below>"
  • CVMFS_REPOSITORIES is a comma-separated list of the repositories that you are interested in.
  • CVMFS_QUOTA_LIMIT is the amount of space in MB that CVMFS will use for the local cache; it should be about 15% less than the size of the local cache filesystem.
  • CVMFS_HTTP_PROXY lists the proxy servers to use. See the documentation about this parameter, including syntax, examples, and use of load-balancing groups and round-robin DNS.
    • If you are an individual user installing CVMFS on a single computer for your own use; you may use CVMFS_HTTP_PROXY="DIRECT" . However, you should ask your local system administration team at your organization (if applicable) if there are forward caching HTTP proxy servers available for your use, as this will improve the performance of your CVMFS client.
    • If you are an administrator installing CVMFS on multiple systems (such as in a cluster, laboratory, campus or other site), the proxies that you have deployed according to the requirements must be specified here in the CVMFS_HTTP_PROXY parameter. Moreover, you should inform users at your site or organization (if applicable) that they may use these proxy servers.

For more information on client configuration see the quickstart guide and client parameters documentation.

Testing

  • Validate the configuration:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ sudo cvmfs_config chksetup
    • Make sure to address any warnings or errors that are reported.
  • Check that the repositories are OK:
Question.png
[name@server ~]$ cvmfs_config probe

If you encounter problems, this debugging guide may help.

Enabling our environment in your session

Once you have mounted the CVMFS repository, enabling our environment in your sessions is as simple as running

Question.png
[name@server ~]$ source /cvmfs/soft.computecanada.ca/config/profile/bash.sh

The above command will not run anything if your user ID is below 1000. This is a safeguard, because you should not rely on our software environment for privileged operation. If you nevertheless want to enable our environment, you can first define the environment variable FORCE_CC_CVMFS=1, with the command

Question.png
[name@server ~]$ export FORCE_CC_CVMFS=1

or you can create a file $HOME/.force_cc_cvmfs in your home folder if you want it to always be active, with

Question.png
[name@server ~]$ touch $HOME/.force_cc_cvmfs

If, on the contrary, you want to avoid enabling our environment, you can define SKIP_CC_CVMFS=1 or create the file $HOME/.skip_cc_cvmfs to ensure that the environment is never enabled in a given account.

Customizing your environment

By default, enabling our environment will automatically detect a number of features of your system, and load default modules. You can control the default behaviour by defining specific environment variables prior to enabling the environment. These are described below.

Environment variables

CC_CLUSTER

This variable is used to identify a cluster. It is used to send some information to the system logs, as well as define behaviour relative to licensed software. By default, its value is computecanada. You may want to set the value of this variable if you want to have system logs tailored to the name of your system.

RSNT_ARCH

This environment variable is used to identify the set of CPU instructions supported by the system. By default, it will be automatically detected based on /proc/cpuinfo. However if you want to force a specific one to be used, you can define it before enabling the environment. The supported instruction sets for our software environment are:

  • sse3
  • avx
  • avx2
  • avx512

RSNT_INTERCONNECT

This environment variable is used to identify the type of interconnect supported by the system. By default, it will be automatically detected based on the presence of /sys/module/opa_vnic (for Intel OmniPath) or /sys/module/ib_core (for InfiniBand). The fall-back value is ethernet. The supported values are

  • omnipath
  • infiniband
  • ethernet

The value of this variable will trigger different options of transport protocol to be used in OpenMPI.

LMOD_SYSTEM_DEFAULT_MODULES

This environment variable defines which modules are loaded by default. If it is left undefined, our environment will define it to load the StdEnv module, which will load by default a version of the Intel compiler, and a version of OpenMPI.

MODULERCFILE

This is an environment variable used by Lmod to define the default version of modules and aliases. You can define your own modulerc file and add it to the environment variable MODULERCFILE. This will take precedence over what is defined in our environment.

System paths

While our software environment strives to be as independent from the host operating system as possible, there are a number of system paths that are taken into account by our environment to facilitate interaction with tools installed on the host operating system. Below are some of these paths.

/opt/software/modulefiles

If this path exists, it will automatically be added to the default MODULEPATH. This allows the use of our software environment while also maintaining locally installed modules.

$HOME/modulefiles

If this path exists, it will automatically be added to the default MODULEPATH. This allows the use of our software environment while also allowing installation of modules inside of home directories.

/opt/software/slurm/bin, /opt/software/bin, /opt/slurm/bin

These paths are all automatically added to the default PATH. This allows your own executable to be added in the search path.

Caveats

Use of software environment by system administrators

System administrators (or users managing their own personal system) who perform privileged system operations should ensure that their session does not depend on the Compute Canada software environment when performing any such operations. For example, if you attempt to update CVMFS using YUM while your session uses a Python module loaded from CVMFS, YUM may run using that module and lose access to it during the update, and the update may become deadlocked. Similarly, if your environment depends on CVMFS and you reconfigure CVMFS in a way that temporarily interrupts access to CVMFS, your session may hang. (When these precautions are taken, in most cases CVMFS can be updated and reconfigured without interrupting access to CVMFS for users, because the update or reconfiguration itself will complete successfully.)

Compute Canada configuration repository

If you already have CVMFS installed and configured in order to use other repositories (like CERN's repositories), and if your CVMFS client configuration relies on the use of a configuration repository, be aware that the cvmfs-config-computecanada package sets up and enables the cvmfs-config.computecanada.ca configuration repository, which may conflict with your use of any other configuration repository and potentially break your pre-existing CVMFS client configuration, since clients can only use a single configuration repository. (The Compute Canada CVMFS configuration repository is a central source of configuration that makes all other Compute Canada CVMFS repositories available. It provides all site-independent client configuration required for Compute Canada usage and allows client configuration updates to be automatically propagated. The contents can be seen in /cvmfs/cvmfs-config.computecanada.ca/etc/cvmfs/ .)

Software packages that are not available

On Compute Canada systems, a number of commercial software packages are made available to authorized users according to the terms of the license owners, but they are not available outside of Compute Canada systems, and following the instructions on this page will not grant you access to them. This includes for example the Intel and Portland Group compilers. While the modules for the Intel and PGI compilers are available, you will only have access to the redistributable parts of these packages, usually the shared objects. These are sufficient to run software packages compiled with these compilers, but not to compile new software.

CUDA location

For CUDA-enabled software packages, our software environment relies on having driver libraries installed in the path /usr/lib64/nvidia. However on some platforms, recent NVidia drivers will install libraries in /usr/lib64 instead. Because it is not possible to add /usr/lib64 to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH without also pulling in all system libraries (which may have incompatibilities with our software environment), we recommend that you create symbolic links in /usr/lib64/nvidia pointing to the installed NVidia libraries. The script below will create the symbolic links that are needed (adjust the driver version that you have)


File : script.sh

NVIDIA_DRV_VER="410.48"
nv_pkg=( "nvidia-driver" "nvidia-driver-libs" "nvidia-driver-cuda" "nvidia-driver-cuda-libs" "nvidia-driver-NVML" "nvidia-driver-NvFBCOpenGL" "nvidia-modprobe" )
yum -y install ${nv_pkg[@]/%/-${NVIDIA_DRV_VER}}
for file in $(rpm -ql ${nv_pkg[@]}); do
  [ "${file%/*}" = '/usr/lib64' ] && [ ! -d "${file}" ] && \ 
  ln -snf "$file" "${file%/*}/nvidia/${file##*/}"
done


LD_LIBRARY_PATH

Our software environment is designed to use RUNPATH. Defining LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not recommended and can lead to the environment not working.

Missing libraries

Because we do not define LD_LIBRARY_PATH, and because our libraries are not installed in default Linux locations, binary packages, such as Anaconda, will often not find libraries that they would usually expect. Please see our documentation on Installing binary packages.

dbus

For some applications, dbus needs to be installed. This needs to be installed locally, on the host operating system.