Skip to content

harvest Lustre filesystem OST/MDT read, write, iops stats and spoof them into the ganglia of client nodes

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

plaguedbypenguins/lustreHarvest

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

48 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

lustreHarvest

harvest Lustre filesystem OST/MDT read, write, iops stats and spoof them into the ganglia of client nodes.

the goal is to have i/o rates to Lustre filesystems show up in the ganglia of each cluster node so that we can easily see how much i/o each client is doing. lustreHarvest gathers read, write and iops rates from OSS machines and iops from MDS machines. Multiple filesystems on each OSS or MDS are supported.

lustreHarvest is a simple python script that acts as both data gatherer on the Lustre servers and as aggregator on the machine that spoofs the processed data into ganglia.

alt text alt text

How it Works

data gathering occurs on Lustre OSS/MDS server nodes eg.

lustreHarvest.py host home short

where ''host'' is the name of the machine to send data to, and ''home'' and ''short'' are the names of Lustre OSTs present.

the master aggregator process runs on ''host'' which is typically a management server. this needs no arguments. eg.

lustreHarvest.py

this turns the data it recieves into rates for each client and spoofs these into ganglia using the gmetric.py module.

the name of the ganglia metric can be set with a simple map between the OST/MDT name, as shown below

# map between fs name in lustre and the name we want to see in ganglia
nameMap = { 'data':'vu_short',
            'apps':'vu_apps',
            'home':'vu_home',
          'images':'vu_images',
          'system':'vu_system',
           'gdata':'g_data' }

the type of filesystem data collected is appended to the base ganglia metric name. for example, the filesystem ''short'' will have ganglia metrics ''vu_short_write_bytes'' ''vu_short_read_bytes'' ''vu_short_oss_ops'' and ''vu_short_mds_ops'' on every compute node.

data is transferred by sending serialised python objects over simple TCP connections. client (OSS/MDS) sends are closely synchronised so that the server can tell when a data gathering sweep is finished, sum and generate statistics for each client, and spoof close to coherent data into ganglia. data integrity is verified by md5 sums of the objects. authenticity is ensured by using a shared secret.

lustreHarvest transparently handles client and server process disconnections and restarts (eg. OSS reboots).

Setup

setup is as simple as editing the script to include your filesystem names so that they can be mapped into ganglia names, and then running the daemons as in the example above (as root).

also the secret file will need to be setup to ensure secure and authenticated data transmission. by default this is ''/root/.lustreHarvest.secret'' and needs to have the same contents (which can be whatever you like) on all machines that run lustreHarvest. the file should be readable only by root.

if you have firewalls on the cluster head nodes you will need to allow port 8022 (by defult) from MDS's and OSS's.

and that's it.

Advanced Setup - Relaying and Site Wide Filesystems

a shared or site-wide filesystem is generally mounted on several clusters. the site-wide filesystem is assumed to know nothing about the compute nodes on each cluster, so the data is sent back using ''relaying''. once the site-wide filesystem data arrives at the head node of each cluster it is then spoofed into ganglia like usual, and then all compute nodes in each cluster will have ganglia entries for how much i/o they are doing to the site-wide filesystem.

relaying is setup using a different TCP port and separate lustreHarvest daemons for the site-wide filesystem data.

for example, OSS and MDS's of the site-wide filesystem ''gdata'' will send to port 8023 on relaying (or site-wide head) node ''alkindi'' with

lustreHarvest.py --port 8023 alkindi gdata

''alkindi'' listens with

lustreHarvest.py --port 8023

and then config lines in the script (yes, yes, I know this should really be in a config file) tell ''alkindi'' where to relay the data to.

# names of cluster head nodes where server instances of this script run
head = { 'vu':'vu-man4', 'xe':'xepbs', 'dcc':'dccpbs' }

# lnets of each cluster
localLnets = { 'vu':'o2ib', 'xe':'o2ib2', 'dcc':'tcp102' }

# relaying servers send summed data to various other server instances.
# specify which clusters to relay to
relay = { 'alkindi': [ 'vu', 'xe', 'dcc' ] }

the above tells alkindi that it will be relaying data to three other clusters and which lnets from the data it has collected are associated with which clusters. eg. site-wide filesystem data for lnet ''o2ib2'' will be sent to head node ''xepbs'' on the ''xe'' cluster.

on the cluster head node ''xepbs'', another instance of lustreHarvest runs and listens for the relayed data on the external interface

lustreHarvest.py --port 8023 --interface xepbs.anu.edu.au

and it spoofs this site-wide filesystem data into ganglia for all the ''xe'' compute nodes.

About

harvest Lustre filesystem OST/MDT read, write, iops stats and spoof them into the ganglia of client nodes

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages