Difference between revisions of "Basic XRootD"
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
=Running a minicluster= | =Running a minicluster= | ||
− | + | Basic experimentation with XRootD can start with utilizing a few machines | |
− | + | where the user has the "sudo" privilege and which aren't heavily loaded | |
− | + | by other applications. It is convenient to control such machined from one screen, | |
− | is not | + | and if security is not a concern due to the network being strictly local |
− | + | telnet can be used as a quick solution | |
− | + | ||
+ | For example, on Ubuntu one can install the necessary daemon software in the following manner: | ||
+ | <pre> | ||
+ | sudo apt-get install xinetd telnetd | ||
+ | </pre> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ...and start the daemon as follows: | ||
+ | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo /etc/init.d/xinetd start | sudo /etc/init.d/xinetd start | ||
Line 20: | Line 27: | ||
sudo chmod +x ~/Desktop/firefox.desktop | sudo chmod +x ~/Desktop/firefox.desktop | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
− | |||
− | |||
=Building XRootD= | =Building XRootD= |
Revision as of 01:38, 7 August 2016
Contents
Disclaimer
The information below is not meant to replace XRootD documentation. It may be helpful for experimentation with a small xrootd cluster and getting familiar with the basics of XRootD configuration.
Running a minicluster
Basic experimentation with XRootD can start with utilizing a few machines where the user has the "sudo" privilege and which aren't heavily loaded by other applications. It is convenient to control such machined from one screen, and if security is not a concern due to the network being strictly local telnet can be used as a quick solution
For example, on Ubuntu one can install the necessary daemon software in the following manner:
sudo apt-get install xinetd telnetd
...and start the daemon as follows:
sudo /etc/init.d/xinetd start
You may need to add a few applications to your desktop, this is done as follows:
sudo cp /usr/share/applications/firefox.desktop ~/Desktop/ sudo chmod +x ~/Desktop/firefox.desktop
Building XRootD
XRootD is packaged for installation for a few flavors of Linux. If your OS is not supported in this manner, building from source is a workable option. Follow the instructions on the official XRootD site.
Starting a simple instance of xrootd service
There is more than way to start the xrootd service (see documentation). The most primitive way is to start the requisite daemon processes from the command line. A few details are given below.
Starting the xrootd daemon by itself is enough to serve data from a single node.
xrootd -c configFile.cfg /path/to/data &
In this case configFile.cfg contains the necessary configuration. Without it present, some simple defaults will be assumed but one cannot do anything remotely meaningful. The path which is to be exported may be defined in the configuration file as well, in which case it's not necessary to put it in the command line.
The "-b" option will start the process in the background by default, and the "-l" option can be used to specify the path to the log file (otherwise stderr will be assumed). Examples:
cmsd -b -l /path/to/log/cmsd.log -c client.cfg xrootd -b -l /path/to/log/xrootd.log -c client.cfg
The "cmsd" is the clustering daemon which is explained in one of the following sections.
If the "path to data" is not explicitely defined, xrootd will default to /tmp which might work
for initial testing but isn't practical otherwise. Whether xrootd is running as expected can be
tested by using the xrdcp client from any machine from which the server is accessible, e.g.
xrdcp myFile.txt root://serverIP//path/to/data
Clustering
In a clustered environment, you also need to start the cluster manager daemon, e.g.
xrootd -c configFile.cfg /path/to/data & cmsd -c configFile.cfg /path/to/data &
Alternatively,
cmsd -b -l /path/to/log/cmsd.log -c client.cfg xrootd -b -l /path/to/log/xrootd.log -c client.cfg
...in which case the log files are explicitly defined on the command line (as opposed to the default stderr) and the processes are run as daemons.
The data in the cluster is exposed through the manager node, whose address is to be used in queries. Example:
xrdcp -f xroot://managerIP//my/path/foo local_foo
The file "foo" will be located and if it exists, will be copied to "local_foo" on the machine running the xrdcp client. Caveat: if multiple files exist in the system under the same path, the result (i.e. which one gets fetched) is random.
Configuration File
An example of a working configuration file suitable for a server node (not for the manager node):
all.role server all.export /path/to/data all.manager 192.168.0.191:3121 xrd.port 1094 acc.authdb /path/to/data/auth_file
In the example above the IP address for the manager needs to be set correctly, it's arbitrary in this sample.
authdb
The "authdb" bit is important, things mostly won't work without proper authorization (quite primitive in this case as it relies on a file with permissions). If all users are given access to all data, the content of the file can be as simple as
u * /path/to/data lr
Redirector
The redirector coordinates the function of the cluster. For example, it finds the data based on the path given by the clients such as xrdcp, without the client having to know which nodes contains this bit of data. A crude (but working) example of the redirector configuration:
all.manager managerIP:3121 all.role manager xrd.port 3121 all.export /path/to/data acc.authdb /path/to/data/auth_file
Note the port number. This is not the data port but the service port to used for communication inside the cluster (e.g. for metadata).
Of course the redirector itseld can also carry data, so configuration of the server might look like this:
all.manager managerIP:3121 all.role manager xrd.port 1094 all.export /path/to/data acc.authdb /path/to/data/auth_file
A crude way to initiate a node in this role might look like this
xrootd -c server.cfg /path/to/data & cmsd -c redir.cfg /path/to/data &
xrdfs
File Info
Filesystem functionality. Example:
xrdfs managerIP ls -l /my/path xrdfs managerIP ls -u /my/path
In the above the first item performs similarly to "ls -l" in Linux shell, the second prints URLs of the files.
The following command locates the path, i.e. returns the address(es) of the server(s) which physically hold(s) the path - can be multiple machines:
xrdfs managerIP locate /my/path
Adding the "-r" option will force the server to refresh, i.e. to do a fresh query. Otherwise, a cached result will be used if it exists.
The "stat" command provides info similar to "stat":
xrdfs managerIP stat /my/path
The "rm" command does what the name suggest, with the usual caveat that if same path is present on a few machines, the result will be arbitrary - one of the files will be deleted at a time.
Host Info
xrdfs hostIP query config role
Checksum
XRootD hosts can report checksums for files, with a few checksum algorithms available. To enable this on a host a special line needs to be added to the configuration file, for example:
xrootd.chksum md5
As usual, it is only necessary to query the redirector in order to get this info by the xrdfs client:
xrdfs managerIP query checksum /my/path/to/file