VNC

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Revision as of 21:02, 26 July 2018 by Roberpj (talk | contribs) (Some minor edits and additions to clarify the content.)
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Matlab running via VNC.

It is sometimes useful to start a graphical user interfaces for certain software packages (like MATLAB for example). The most widely-available way to do this is with SSH and X11 forwarding, but the performance of SSH+X11 is often too slow to use useful. An alternative is to use VNC to start and connect to a remote desktop.

VNC Client

First you will need to install a VNC client on your machine to connect to the VNC server. We recommend using TigerVNC. A TigerVNC package is available for most Linux distributions, as are binaries for Windows and Mac.

Windows and Mac

Starting at the TigerVNC home page

  1. click on the GitHub release page link
  2. scroll down and click on the Binaries are avaiable from bintray link
  3. scroll down and pick the .exe file for Windows (note the 64 for 64 bit Windows) or the .dmg file for Mac

If asked during the installation, do not enable the VNC server or start the VNC service. This is for sharing your desktop, not for connecting to our systems.

Linux

Install the TigerVNC viewer with your package manager and then symlink ~/.vnc/x509_ca.pem to your system certificate authority list.

Debian or Ubuntu

[name@local_computer]$ sudo apt-get install tigervnc-viewer
[name@local_computer]$ mkdir --parents ~/.vnc
[name@local_computer]$ ln --symbolic --interactive --no-target-directory /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt ~/.vnc/x509_ca.pem


Fedora, CentOS, or RHEL

[name@local_computer]$ sudo yum install tigervnc
[name@local_computer]$ mkdir --parents ~/.vnc
[name@local_computer]$ ln --symbolic --interactive --no-target-directory /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt ~/.vnc/x509_ca.pem


Gentoo

[name@local_computer]$ emerge -av net-misc/tigervnc
[name@local_computer]$ mkdir --parents ~/.vnc
[name@local_computer]$ ln --symbolic --interactive --no-target-directory /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt ~/.vnc/x509_ca.pem


VNC Server

Now you need a VNC server to connect to. This can be either the dedicated VDI login system on Graham, or one you start manually on an allocated compute node.

VDI Login Nodes

gra-vdi.computecanada.ca

Graham has dedicated VDI login nodes that provide a full graphical desktop, accelerated OpenGL, and access to /home, /project, and /scratch filesystems. You can connect to one of the VNC login nodes directly by starting your VNC viewer and entering the address gra-vdi.computecanada.ca. With TigerVNC, this means start the client from your Applications menu or run vncviewer from the command line. This will bring up a login screen to which you can log in using your Compute Canada credentials.

As with regular login nodes, these VDI login nodes are a shared resource and are not intended for doing batch computation (that is what the compute nodes are for), so please limit your use of them to graphics-related tasks. A non-exclusive list of examples includes graphical pre-processing steps such as mesh generation, graphical post-processing steps such as visualization, and using graphical intergrated development environments (IDEs).

Installing software

Open-source software is provided by the nix module. The nix store on gra-vdi is preconfigured to use accelerated OpenGL whenever possible. To install a nix package into your environment click the black terminal icon on the top menu bar or pick Applications -> System Tools -> Terminal. Once a terminal window appears, load the nix module. Now you can search for programs using the nix search <regexp> command and install them in your environment using the nix-env --install --attr <attribute> command. As an example, say you wanted to install QGIS:

Question.png
[name@gra-vdi4]$ module load nix
Question.png
[name@gra-vdi4]$ nix search qgis
Attribute name: nixpkgs.qgis
Package name: qgis
Version: 2.18.20
Description: User friendly Open Source Geographic Information System
Question.png
[name@gra-vdi4]$ nix-env --install --attr nixpkgs.qgis

Your nix environment persists from one login to the next, therefore you only need to run an install command once. Whatever you install today will be available anytime you load the nix module.

[name@gra-vdi4]$ module load nix
[name@gra-vdi4]$ qgis


Building OpenGL applications

For accelerated OpenGL to work, it is necessary to adjust binaries to pre-load an appropriate version of the vglfaker.so library from VirtualGL. This has already be done for software installed by staff, and is done automatically for any OpenGL software built or installed via nix, but it is something you have to do yourself for software you have manually installed.

The easiest way to do this is use the patchelf utility from nix (use nix-env --install --attr nixpkgs.patchelf to install it) to adjust the final binary. For example, say you built an OpenGL application against the system libraries and installed it as ~/.local/bin/myglapp. Then you need to add the system VirtualGL library /usr/lib64/VirtualGL/libvglfaker.so as the first required library to it

[name@gra-vdi4]$ module load nix
[name@gra-vdi4]$ patchelf --add-needed /usr/lib64/VirtualGL/libvglfaker.so ~/.local/bin/myglapp

Note that it is also possible to pre-load vglfaker.so via the LD_PRELOAD environment variable. This is generally a bad idea as it applies indiscriminately to all binaries, and those that require a different vglfaker.so than that set in LD_PRELOAD will then fail, but it can be used safely in some cases in wrapper scripts.

Compute Nodes

Where VDI login nodes are unavailable you can start a VNC server on a compute node, and, with suitable port forwarding, connect to it from your desktop. This gives you dedicated access to the server, but does not provide a full graphical desktop or hardware-accelerated OpenGL.

Starting a VNC server

Before starting your VNC server, reserve a node on which to run it using salloc. As an example, to request an interactive job using 4 CPUs and 16GB of memory you could use the command:

[name@server ~]$ salloc -c 4 --mem 16000M


Once your interactive job has started, start a VNC server with vncserver. Take note of which node your job is running on. If unsure, you can use the hostname command to check. You will be prompted to set a password for your VNC server - DO NOT LEAVE THIS BLANK.

Command with sample output:

Question.png
[name@server ~]$ vncserver
You will require a password to access your desktops.

Password:
Verify:
Would you like to enter a view-only password (y/n)? n

New 'cdr767.int.cedar.computecanada.ca:1 (username)' desktop is cdr767.int.cedar.computecanada.ca:1

Creating default startup script /home/username/.vnc/xstartup
Creating default config /home/username/.vnc/config
Starting applications specified in /home/username/.vnc/xstartup
Log file is /home/username/.vnc/cdr767.int.cedar.computecanada.ca:1.log

Determine which port the VNC server is using by examining the log file with cat or grep, e.g.:

Question.png
[name@server ~]$ grep port /home/username/.vnc/cdr767:1.log
vncext:      Listening for VNC connections on all interface(s), port 5901

Setting up an SSH tunnel to the VNC server

Once your VNC server has been started, create a "bridge" to allow your local desktop computer to connect to the compute node directly. This bridge connection is created using an SSH tunnel. SSH tunnels are created on your computer using the same SSH connection command as usual, with an extra option added - this follows the format: ssh user@host -L port:compute_node:port.

An example SSH tunnel command ran on your computer to connect to a VNC server running on Graham's gra796 node and port 5901 would be the following:

ssh username@cedar.computecanada.ca -L 5902:cdr767:5901

The SSH tunnel operates like a normal SSH session: You may run commands over it, etc. However, keep in mind that this SSH session is also your connection to the VNC server. If you terminate the SSH session, your connection to the VNC server will be lost! For more information, please see SSH tunnelling.

Connecting to the VNC server

To connect to the VNC server, you need to tell your VNC client to connect to localhost. The following example uses TigerVNC's vncviewer to connect to the running VNC server on cdr767. You will be prompted for the VNC password that you set earlier in order to connect.

Command with sample output:

Question.png
[name@local_computer]$ vncviewer localhost:5902
TigerVNC Viewer 64-bit v1.8.0
Built on: 2018-06-13 10:56
Copyright (C) 1999-2017 TigerVNC Team and many others (see README.txt)
See http://www.tigervnc.org for information on TigerVNC.

Tue Jul 10 17:40:24 2018
 DecodeManager: Detected 8 CPU core(s)
 DecodeManager: Creating 4 decoder thread(s)
 CConn:       connected to host localhost port 5902
 CConnection: Server supports RFB protocol version 3.8
 CConnection: Using RFB protocol version 3.8
 CConnection: Choosing security type VeNCrypt(19)
 CVeNCrypt:   Choosing security type TLSVnc (258)

Tue Jul 10 17:40:27 2018
 CConn:       Using pixel format depth 24 (32bpp) little-endian rgb888
 CConn:       Using Tight encoding
 CConn:       Enabling continuous updates

The port number (here 5902) must match the local port (the first number) you specified when you set up the SSH tunnel. The default VNC port is 5900. If you specified 5900 for the local port of the SSH tunnel, you could omit it when you invoke vncviewer. However, Windows users may find that they cannot set up an SSH tunnel on local port 5900.

Once connected, you will be presented with an Xterm window and a blank desktop. To launch a program, simply invoke the command as you would normally within the Xterm window. xclock will start a sample clock application you can use to test things out. To start a more complicated program like Matlab, load the module and launch the program as follows:

[name@server ~]$ module load matlab
[name@server ~]$ matlab

Resetting your VNC server password

If you forget your VNC password or otherwise want to delete your VNC configs and start over with a clean slate, you can delete your ~/.vnc directory. The next time you run vncserver, you will be prompted to set a new password.