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1 MOLAR: MOdular Linux and Adaptive Runtime support Project Team David Bernholdt 1, Christian Engelmann 1, Stephen L. Scott 1, Jeffrey Vetter 1 Arthur.

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Presentation on theme: "1 MOLAR: MOdular Linux and Adaptive Runtime support Project Team David Bernholdt 1, Christian Engelmann 1, Stephen L. Scott 1, Jeffrey Vetter 1 Arthur."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 MOLAR: MOdular Linux and Adaptive Runtime support Project Team David Bernholdt 1, Christian Engelmann 1, Stephen L. Scott 1, Jeffrey Vetter 1 Arthur B. Maccabe 2, Patrick G. Bridges 2 Frank Mueller 3 Ponnuswany Sadayappan 4 Chokchai Leangsuksun 5 1 Oak Ridge National Laboratory 2 University of New Mexico 3 North Carolina State University 4 Ohio State University 5 Louisiana Tech University Briefing at: Scalable Systems Software meeting Argonne National Laboratory - August 26, 2004

2 2 Research Plan  Create a modular and configurable Linux system that allows customized changes based on the requirements of the applications, runtime systems, and cluster management software.  Build runtime systems that leverage the OS modularity and configurability to improve efficiency, reliability, scalability, ease-of-use, and provide support to legacy and promising programming models.  Advance computer RAS management systems to work cooperatively with the OS/R to identify and preemptively resolve system issues.  Explore the use of advanced monitoring and adaptation to improve application performance and predictability of system interruptions.

3 3 MOLAR map

4 4 MOLAR: Modular Linux and Adaptive Runtime support HEC Linux OS: modular, custom, light-weight Monitoring RAS: reliability, availability, serviceability High availability [LaTech, ORNL] Process state saving [LLNL] Message logging [NCSU] Extend/adapt runtime/OS [ORNL, OSU] Root cause analysis [ ORNL, LaTech ] Kernel design [UNM, ORNL, LLNL] Programming modelsTestbeds Evaluation [ORNL, OSU] Provided [Cray, ORNL] MOLAR: Modular Linux and Adaptive Runtime support HEC Linux OS: modular, custom, light-weight Monitoring RAS: reliability, availability, serviceability High availabilityExtend/adapt runtime/OS [ORNL, OSU] Kernel design [UNM, ORNL] Programming modelsTestbeds Evaluation [ORNL, OSU] Provided [Cray, ORNL] Root cause analysis ORNL LaTech [LaTech, ORNL, NCSU]

5 5 RAS for Scientific and Engineering Applications  High mean time between interrupts (MTBI) for hardware, system software, and storage devices.  High mean time between errors/failures that affect users.  Recovery is automatic w/o human intervention.  Minimal work loss due to recovery process. Computation – Storage – Network

6 6 Case for RAS in HEC  Today’s systems need to reboot to recover.  Entire system often down for any maintenance or repair.  Compute nodes sit idle if their head (service) node is down.  Availability and MTBI typically decreases as system grows.  The “hidden” costs of failures  researchers’ lost work-in-progress  researchers on hold  additional system staff  checkpoint & restart time  Why do we accept such significant system outages due to failures, maintenance or repair?  With the expected investment into HEC we simply cannot afford low availability!  We need to drastically increase the availability of HEC computing resources now!

7 7 High-availability in Industry  Industry has shown for years that 99.999% (five nines) high- availability is feasible for computing services.  Used in corporate web servers, distributed data bases, business accounting and stock exchange services.  OS-level high-availability has not been a priority in the past.  Implementation involves complex algorithms.  Development and distribution licensing issues exist.  Most solutions are proprietary and do not perform well.  HA-OSCAR first freely available open source HA cluster implementation.  If we don’t step-up and do it as an Open Source proof-of- concept implementation and set the standard no one will.

8 8 Availibility by the Nines* 9’sAvailabilityDowntime/YearExamples 190.0%36 days, 12 hoursPersonal Computers 299.0%87 hours, 36 minEntry Level Business 399.9%8 hours, 45.6 minISPs, Mainstream Business 499.99%52 min, 33.6 secData Centers 599.999%5 min, 15.4 secBanking, Medical 699.9999%31.5 secondsMilitary Defense *Highly-Affordable High Availability by Alan Robertson Linux Magazine, November 2003 http://www.linux-mag.com/2003-11/availability_01.html  Service measured by “9’s of availability”  90% has one 9, 99% has two 9s, etc…  Good HA package + substandard hardware = up to 3 nines  Enterprise-class hardware + stable Linux kernel = 5+ nines

9 9 Federated System Management

10 10 High-availability Methods Active/Hot-Standby:  Single head node.  Idle standby head node(s).  Backup to shared storage.  Service interruption for the  time of the fail-over.  Rollback to backup.  Simple checkpoint/restart.  Service interruption for the time of restore-over. Active/Active:  Many active head nodes.  Work load distribution.  Symmetric replication  between head nodes.  Continuous service.  Always up-to-date.  Complex distributed control algorithms.  No restore-over necessary

11 11 High-availability Technology Active/Hot-Standby:  HA-OSCAR with active/  hot-standby head node.  Cluster system software.  No support for multiple active/active head nodes.  No middleware support.  No support for compute nodes. Active/Active:  HARNESS with symmetric  distributed virtual machine.  Heterogeneous adaptable  distributed middleware.  No system level support.  System-level data replication and distributed control service needed for active/active head node solution.  Reconfigurable framework similar to HARNESS needed to adapt to system properties and application needs.

12 12 Modular RAS Framework for Terascale Computing Distributed Control Service Data Replication Service Group Communication Service Reliable Server Groups: Virtual Synchrony: Symmetric Replication: Communication Methods: TCP/IPShared MemoryEtc. Reliable Services: Job Sched.User Mgmt.Etc. Service Node Service Node Service Node High-Available Service Nodes: To Compute Nodes


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