Difference between revisions of "Project Week 2008 Special topic breakout: GWE"
From NAMIC Wiki
Line 54: | Line 54: | ||
** "Standalone GWE" (requests parallelized as processes running in your machine - no cluster(s) needed). | ** "Standalone GWE" (requests parallelized as processes running in your machine - no cluster(s) needed). | ||
** Resolve "Windows" issues (cygwin does not work as expected). | ** Resolve "Windows" issues (cygwin does not work as expected). | ||
− | ** Remote files directory staging ( | + | ** Remote files directory staging (currently only single files). |
** Users application registry database and auto-deployment module to clusters. | ** Users application registry database and auto-deployment module to clusters. | ||
+ | ** Support for array type of iteration variables. | ||
** Daemon admin utilities (shutdown, restart, download DB, etc.) | ** Daemon admin utilities (shutdown, restart, download DB, etc.) | ||
** Order behavioral parameters (max concurrent jobs running, job execution timeout, launch mode, virtual file system size, etc). | ** Order behavioral parameters (max concurrent jobs running, job execution timeout, launch mode, virtual file system size, etc). |
Revision as of 17:37, 24 June 2008
Home < Project Week 2008 Special topic breakout: GWEBack to 2008 Summer Project Week Agenda
Contents
Agenda
GWE Overview
- Distributed enterprise system, which leverages on clusters of computers, in order to provide a grid computing platform for end users to easily and effectively parallelize the execution of inter-independent processes.
- GWE Client (End User - You) <=== Secure RPC Network ===> GWE Daemon(s) (Cluster Head Node)
- Detailed information can be found on the GWE Project Site.
- Overview Presentation
GWE Setup
Installation
- Download bundle, unbundle & set appropriate environment variables.
- Detailed information can be found on the 'GWE Installation Guide'
Configuration
- Define your grid and provide your authentication information to access "grid resources".
- Detailed information can be found on the 'GWE Configuration Guide'
Daemon Setup
- ONLY IF YOU ARE GOING TO ENHANCED A NEW CLUSTER WITH GWE CAPABILITIES (GWE Enabled).
- "Standalone GWE" will be available in the next release. GWE will run on your machine. Parallelization at the OS level, not distributed across cluster(s).
- From the machine where you installed GWE, run the utility "gwe-util-daemon-fullsetup.sh". That's it!
- After that a "GWE Daemon" will be running in your cluster having your cluster user as this "GWE Daemon" administrator (different than roles in the cluster OS!).
- A "GWE Daemon" is just another application in a machine, therefore "GWE Daemon"s can run in a single machine, although it is not recommended.
- Detailed information can be found on the 'GWE Administrator Guide'
GWE Clients
- GWE architecture provides multiple extensible modules, one of which is the "GWE Client API".
- Using the "GWE Client API", developers can create their own "GWE Client" applications.
- "GWE Client" applications are those; which allow end users to submit their "grid computing" requests to the GWE backend system.
- Currently, the GWE project team has created two "GWE Client" applications:
GWE Terminal
- Console based GWE client.
- Uses P2EL proprietary language to describe set of commands as permutation of templated commands with an associated parameter space.
- Many other monitoring/control commands available.
- Detailed information can be found on the 'End Users Guide'
- Video Demo
GSlicer3
- Slicer3 based GWE client ("GWE Powered" Slicer3).
- Basically a Slicer3 product enhanced with "GWE Client API" and custom development to provide "grid computing" capabilities to Slicer3.
- Setup: Download GSlicer3 bundle, unbundle it, set appropriate environmental variables.
- Config: Same as regular GWE.
- Detailed information can be found on the 'GSlicer3 Guide'
- Overview Presentation
- Video Demo
Future Work
- Usual fixes, improvements, user support, documentation and project management.
- GWE Core
- "Standalone GWE" (requests parallelized as processes running in your machine - no cluster(s) needed).
- Resolve "Windows" issues (cygwin does not work as expected).
- Remote files directory staging (currently only single files).
- Users application registry database and auto-deployment module to clusters.
- Support for array type of iteration variables.
- Daemon admin utilities (shutdown, restart, download DB, etc.)
- Order behavioral parameters (max concurrent jobs running, job execution timeout, launch mode, virtual file system size, etc).
- Alert notification module (email, pager, etc).
- Scheduling module.
- Requests control: abort, pause, resume (under construction).
- Descriptive request result parsing. P2EL semantics + parser framework.
- Multi-cluster functionality. Currently only single cluster mode (not true grid computing yet). Pending: module to daisy chain "GWE Daemon"s.
- Single daemon services registry (Single IP Port/RMI registry) for multiple daemons.
- More file system drivers: GridFTP, SRB, etc.
- X.509 certificates support for authentication.
- "GWE Powered" Portlets, FreeSurfer, FIPS, etc.
- MPI support.
- Order chaining (revamping prototyped framework for chaining Slicer3 modules).
- More resource manager drivers: Torque, GWE, Cloud, etc.
- JDSL support (standard submission protocol).
- JMX support (runtime diagnostics).
- Full feature statistical module.
- etc...
- GSlicer3:
- Centralized configuration.
- Usage of currently available specialized widgets (and maybe new GWE specialized widgets?).
- API to build specialized "GWE Powered" Slicer3 modules.
- Auto-deployment of Slicer3 in running clusters (as an extension of the users application auto-deployment module).
- GWE requests monitoring module to replace progress report in the status bar. UI with a realtime status of all GWE requests submitted using GSlicer3.