Skip to content

A monolithic distributed storage for Big Data analytics

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

asu-cactus/lachesis

Repository files navigation

Lachesis++ - An AI-assisted Data Integration and UDF-Centric Analytics System

Credits

Lachesis++ is built on top of an earlier version of the open source project PlinyCompute (https://github.com/riceplinygroup/plinycompute).

Building

Requirements:
Software:

scons http://scons.org/

bison

flex

LLVM/clang++3.8

Snappy libsnappy1v5, libsnappy-dev

GSL libgsl-dev

Boost libboost-dev, libboost-program-options-dev, libboost-filesystem-dev, libboost-system-dev

UUID sudo apt-get install libuuid1 uuid-dev

OS: Ubuntu-16, MacOS

Run: scons

Run Pangea on local

python scripts/startPseudoCluster.py #numThreads #sharedMemPoolSize (MB)

Cleanup Pangea Data on local

scripts/cleanupNode.sh

Run Pangea on a Cluster

Firstly, we need to setup the test suite by following five steps. (Those five steps only need to be done only once)

Step (1.1) In rice cloud or AWS, find one ubuntu server as your Master, and log in to that server using the 'ubuntu' account; (In future, we shall not be constrained by OS, and we can use the 'pdb' account)

Step (1.2) Download pangea code from github to the Master server, configure PDB_HOME to be the github repository. For example, you can:

 - edit ~/.bashrc, and add following to that file: export PDB_HOME=/home/ubuntu/pangea
 Here /home/ubuntu/pangea should be replaced by the path to the github repository

Step (1.3) Next, configure PDB_INSTALL to be the location that you want pangea to be installed at on the workers. For example, you might add the following to .basrc:

 export PDB_INSTALL=/disk1/PDB
 Here /disk1/PDB should be the path to the directory where you want the binary and code to be copied to, and where data will be stored.
 Make sure that the user that runs the program has authorization to read/write/create in this directory

Then run following command in shell to make sure these variables are set: source ~/.bashrc

Step (1.4) In rice cloud, find at least one different ubuntu servers as your Slaves, make sure those slaves can be accessed by Master through network and vice versa, and also make sure you have only one PEM file to log on to all slaves. Then add only IPs of those slaves to the file: $PDB_HOME/conf/serverlist. For example, my serverlist looks like following: 10.134.96.184 10.134.96.153

Step (1.5) On the master server, install the cluster by run:

 scripts/install.sh $pem_file

Secondly, we start the cluster

On the Master server:

Step (2.1)

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/startMaster.sh $pem_file

wait for the scripts to return (see something like "master is started!" in the end), and move to step 2.3:

Step (2.2) : run following command:

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/startWorkers.sh $pem_file $MasterIPAddress $ThreadNumber (optional, default is 4) $SharedMemSize (optional, unit MB, default is 4096)

wait for the scripts to return (see something like "servers are started!" in the end).

Thirdly, you can run test cases

For example:

In PDB without Pliny dependency (PLINY_HOME is set to empty) cd $PDB_HOME bin/test52 Y Y YourTestingDataSizeInMB (e.g. 1024 to test 1GB data) YourMasterIP

Stop Cluster

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/stopWorkers.sh $pem_file

Soft Reboot Cluster (restart cluster with all data kept)

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/stopWorkers.sh $pem_filex scripts/startMaster.sh $pem_file scripts/startWorkers.sh $pem_file $MasterIPAddress $ThreadNum $SharedMemoryPoolSize

Upgrade Cluster (for developers and testers upgrade binaries and restart cluster with all data kept)

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/stopWorkers.sh $pem_file scripts/upgrade.sh $pem_file scripts/startMaster.sh $pem_file scripts/startWorkers.sh $pem_file $MasterIPAddress $ThreadNum $SharedMemoryPoolSize

Cleanup Catalog and Storage data

You can cleanup all catalog and storage data by running following command in master

cd $PDB_HOME scripts/cleanup.sh $pem_file

Environment Variables:

(1) PDB_SSH_OPTS

by default, it is defined to be "-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no"

(2) PDB_SSH_FOREGROUND

if you define it to non empty like "y" or "yes", it will run as before and bring all output to your ssh terminal;

by default, it is not defined, and it will run in background using nohup, which means it will not be interrupted by ssh.

Run Lachesis to Automatically Partition Data Using Self-Learning

Rule-based

In SConstruct:

make sure below compiler flag is disabled: commented or removed:

common_env.Append(CCFLAGS='-DAPPLY_REINFORCEMENT_LEARNING')

In src/mainServer/source/MasterMain.cc:

make sure:

bool isSelfLearning = true;

and make sure:

bool trainingMode = false;

Make sure you rebuild the repository after making these changes.

Deep Reinforcement Learning-based

In SConstruct:

make sure below compiler flag is enabled:

common_env.Append(CCFLAGS='-DAPPLY_REINFORCEMENT_LEARNING')

Make sure you rebuild the repository after making these changes.

Then start the python RL server by:

cd scripts/pangeaDeepRL

python rlServer.py

For testing mode:

make sure in ./src/mainServer/source/MasterMain.cc:

bool isSelfLearning = true;

and make sure:

bool trainingMode = false;

Make sure you rebuild the repository after making these changes.

For training mode:

make sure in ./src/mainServer/source/MasterMain.cc:

bool isSelfLearning = true;

and make sure:

bool trainingMode = true;

Make sure you rebuild the repository after making these changes(by using command 'scons tpchNormal').

The only way to run in training mode, is to design and develop a training process. An example of such training process is here:

Step 1. Determine a set of workloads for forming training traces, e.g. "TPCHQuery01", "TPCHQuery02", "TPCHQuery04".

Before this step you need to get the TPCH dataset from TPC Benchmark. https://github.com/electrum/tpch-dbgen

Download and configure with your own environment, configure DSS_PATH to the folder path where you want this dataset be stored.

Run './dbgen -s #scaleofdata' to generate specific size of data.

Run 'bin/tpchDataLoader ~/tpchdatafilepath' to load data.

Run queries like 'bin/runQuery01', 'bin/runQuery02' to generate some workloads.

Step 2. Form the history by running all workloads, capture all possible candidate partitioning schemes and statistics for each partitioning predicate (lambda)

An example for this step is coded in: src/tpch/source/tpchPrepareTraining.cc

Run 'bin/tpchPrepareTraining'

Step 3. Run all workloads with all potential partitioning candidates in each training environment. Store this information into a RUN_STAT table.

An example for this step is coded in: src/tpch/source/tpchGenTrace.cc

Run 'bin/tpchGenTrace #tpchdatafilepath #startID #endID'

Step 4. Training the DRL model by randomly generates new workloads, which are arbitrary combinations of the workloads selected in Step 1.

An example of this step is coded in: src/tpch/source/tpchTraining1.cc

Run 'bin/tpchTraining1'

Before executing the step, make sure you have started the RL server by:

cd scripts/pangeaDeepRL

python rlServer.py

About

A monolithic distributed storage for Big Data analytics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published