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Guidelines for Setting Up a Cluster

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Revision as of 07:21, 10 May 2007 by Lydia (talk | contribs)
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Some tips we've collected while working on clusters that can lead to a more useful debugging experience.

  1. Shared home directories
    Having a shared namespace comes in handy all the time. Its useful for bringing up lustre builds, collecting logs, blatting configuration files, etc. sharing /home is the least surprising.
  2. PDSH
    pdsh is an absolute requirement. Bonus points for being able to pdsh to all nodes from any node.
  3. Regular naming
    A node naming scheme that involves a short prefix and regular incrementing decimal node numbers combines very well with automation like pdsh. As machines tend to take on different roles as different people use the cluster, it doesn't make a lot of sense to give hostnames based on roles in the lustre universe (mds, ost, etc).
  4. Serial Consoles
    As in any data center, they're essential. Log their output for later retrieval should the kernel go wrong. Provide a useful front end like 'conman' or 'conserver'. Make sure the front-end can send breaks to the kernel's sysrq facility over the serial console.
  5. Collect syslogs in one place
    Its nice to be able to watch one log for errors that are reported to syslog across the cluster.
  6. Remote Power Management
    If a machine wedges one needs to be able to reboot it without physically flipping a switch. Any number of vendors offer serial controlled power widgets.
  7. Automated Disaster Recovery
    Its nice to be able to reimage a node by via netbooting and network software installs. Its a low frequency endevour, though.
  1. Boot Quickly
    1. Disable non-essential services to be started at boot-time
    2. Minimize hardware checks the BIOS may do
    3. Especially avoid things like RH's Kudzu which can ask for user input before proceeding

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